mirror of
https://github.com/tahoe-lafs/tahoe-lafs.git
synced 2024-12-22 14:22:25 +00:00
93bb3e995a
Updates docs, tests, explains how to update an old gatherer.
354 lines
15 KiB
ReStructuredText
354 lines
15 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. -*- coding: utf-8-with-signature -*-
|
|
|
|
================
|
|
Tahoe Statistics
|
|
================
|
|
|
|
1. `Overview`_
|
|
2. `Statistics Categories`_
|
|
3. `Running a Tahoe Stats-Gatherer Service`_
|
|
4. `Using Munin To Graph Stats Values`_
|
|
|
|
Overview
|
|
========
|
|
|
|
Each Tahoe node collects and publishes statistics about its operations as it
|
|
runs. These include counters of how many files have been uploaded and
|
|
downloaded, CPU usage information, performance numbers like latency of
|
|
storage server operations, and available disk space.
|
|
|
|
The easiest way to see the stats for any given node is use the web interface.
|
|
From the main "Welcome Page", follow the "Operational Statistics" link inside
|
|
the small "This Client" box. If the welcome page lives at
|
|
http://localhost:3456/, then the statistics page will live at
|
|
http://localhost:3456/statistics . This presents a summary of the stats
|
|
block, along with a copy of the raw counters. To obtain just the raw counters
|
|
(in JSON format), use /statistics?t=json instead.
|
|
|
|
Statistics Categories
|
|
=====================
|
|
|
|
The stats dictionary contains two keys: 'counters' and 'stats'. 'counters'
|
|
are strictly counters: they are reset to zero when the node is started, and
|
|
grow upwards. 'stats' are non-incrementing values, used to measure the
|
|
current state of various systems. Some stats are actually booleans, expressed
|
|
as '1' for true and '0' for false (internal restrictions require all stats
|
|
values to be numbers).
|
|
|
|
Under both the 'counters' and 'stats' dictionaries, each individual stat has
|
|
a key with a dot-separated name, breaking them up into groups like
|
|
'cpu_monitor' and 'storage_server'.
|
|
|
|
The currently available stats (as of release 1.6.0 or so) are described here:
|
|
|
|
**counters.storage_server.\***
|
|
|
|
this group counts inbound storage-server operations. They are not provided
|
|
by client-only nodes which have been configured to not run a storage server
|
|
(with [storage]enabled=false in tahoe.cfg)
|
|
|
|
allocate, write, close, abort
|
|
these are for immutable file uploads. 'allocate' is incremented when a
|
|
client asks if it can upload a share to the server. 'write' is
|
|
incremented for each chunk of data written. 'close' is incremented when
|
|
the share is finished. 'abort' is incremented if the client abandons
|
|
the upload.
|
|
|
|
get, read
|
|
these are for immutable file downloads. 'get' is incremented
|
|
when a client asks if the server has a specific share. 'read' is
|
|
incremented for each chunk of data read.
|
|
|
|
readv, writev
|
|
these are for immutable file creation, publish, and retrieve. 'readv'
|
|
is incremented each time a client reads part of a mutable share.
|
|
'writev' is incremented each time a client sends a modification
|
|
request.
|
|
|
|
add-lease, renew, cancel
|
|
these are for share lease modifications. 'add-lease' is incremented
|
|
when an 'add-lease' operation is performed (which either adds a new
|
|
lease or renews an existing lease). 'renew' is for the 'renew-lease'
|
|
operation (which can only be used to renew an existing one). 'cancel'
|
|
is used for the 'cancel-lease' operation.
|
|
|
|
bytes_freed
|
|
this counts how many bytes were freed when a 'cancel-lease'
|
|
operation removed the last lease from a share and the share
|
|
was thus deleted.
|
|
|
|
bytes_added
|
|
this counts how many bytes were consumed by immutable share
|
|
uploads. It is incremented at the same time as the 'close'
|
|
counter.
|
|
|
|
**stats.storage_server.\***
|
|
|
|
allocated
|
|
this counts how many bytes are currently 'allocated', which
|
|
tracks the space that will eventually be consumed by immutable
|
|
share upload operations. The stat is increased as soon as the
|
|
upload begins (at the same time the 'allocated' counter is
|
|
incremented), and goes back to zero when the 'close' or 'abort'
|
|
message is received (at which point the 'disk_used' stat should
|
|
incremented by the same amount).
|
|
|
|
disk_total, disk_used, disk_free_for_root, disk_free_for_nonroot, disk_avail, reserved_space
|
|
these all reflect disk-space usage policies and status.
|
|
'disk_total' is the total size of disk where the storage
|
|
server's BASEDIR/storage/shares directory lives, as reported
|
|
by /bin/df or equivalent. 'disk_used', 'disk_free_for_root',
|
|
and 'disk_free_for_nonroot' show related information.
|
|
'reserved_space' reports the reservation configured by the
|
|
tahoe.cfg [storage]reserved_space value. 'disk_avail'
|
|
reports the remaining disk space available for the Tahoe
|
|
server after subtracting reserved_space from disk_avail. All
|
|
values are in bytes.
|
|
|
|
accepting_immutable_shares
|
|
this is '1' if the storage server is currently accepting uploads of
|
|
immutable shares. It may be '0' if a server is disabled by
|
|
configuration, or if the disk is full (i.e. disk_avail is less than
|
|
reserved_space).
|
|
|
|
total_bucket_count
|
|
this counts the number of 'buckets' (i.e. unique
|
|
storage-index values) currently managed by the storage
|
|
server. It indicates roughly how many files are managed
|
|
by the server.
|
|
|
|
latencies.*.*
|
|
these stats keep track of local disk latencies for
|
|
storage-server operations. A number of percentile values are
|
|
tracked for many operations. For example,
|
|
'storage_server.latencies.readv.50_0_percentile' records the
|
|
median response time for a 'readv' request. All values are in
|
|
seconds. These are recorded by the storage server, starting
|
|
from the time the request arrives (post-deserialization) and
|
|
ending when the response begins serialization. As such, they
|
|
are mostly useful for measuring disk speeds. The operations
|
|
tracked are the same as the counters.storage_server.* counter
|
|
values (allocate, write, close, get, read, add-lease, renew,
|
|
cancel, readv, writev). The percentile values tracked are:
|
|
mean, 01_0_percentile, 10_0_percentile, 50_0_percentile,
|
|
90_0_percentile, 95_0_percentile, 99_0_percentile,
|
|
99_9_percentile. (the last value, 99.9 percentile, means that
|
|
999 out of the last 1000 operations were faster than the
|
|
given number, and is the same threshold used by Amazon's
|
|
internal SLA, according to the Dynamo paper).
|
|
Percentiles are only reported in the case of a sufficient
|
|
number of observations for unambiguous interpretation. For
|
|
example, the 99.9th percentile is (at the level of thousandths
|
|
precision) 9 thousandths greater than the 99th
|
|
percentile for sample sizes greater than or equal to 1000,
|
|
thus the 99.9th percentile is only reported for samples of 1000
|
|
or more observations.
|
|
|
|
|
|
**counters.uploader.files_uploaded**
|
|
|
|
**counters.uploader.bytes_uploaded**
|
|
|
|
**counters.downloader.files_downloaded**
|
|
|
|
**counters.downloader.bytes_downloaded**
|
|
|
|
These count client activity: a Tahoe client will increment these when it
|
|
uploads or downloads an immutable file. 'files_uploaded' is incremented by
|
|
one for each operation, while 'bytes_uploaded' is incremented by the size of
|
|
the file.
|
|
|
|
**counters.mutable.files_published**
|
|
|
|
**counters.mutable.bytes_published**
|
|
|
|
**counters.mutable.files_retrieved**
|
|
|
|
**counters.mutable.bytes_retrieved**
|
|
|
|
These count client activity for mutable files. 'published' is the act of
|
|
changing an existing mutable file (or creating a brand-new mutable file).
|
|
'retrieved' is the act of reading its current contents.
|
|
|
|
**counters.chk_upload_helper.\***
|
|
|
|
These count activity of the "Helper", which receives ciphertext from clients
|
|
and performs erasure-coding and share upload for files that are not already
|
|
in the grid. The code which implements these counters is in
|
|
src/allmydata/immutable/offloaded.py .
|
|
|
|
upload_requests
|
|
incremented each time a client asks to upload a file
|
|
upload_already_present: incremented when the file is already in the grid
|
|
|
|
upload_need_upload
|
|
incremented when the file is not already in the grid
|
|
|
|
resumes
|
|
incremented when the helper already has partial ciphertext for
|
|
the requested upload, indicating that the client is resuming an
|
|
earlier upload
|
|
|
|
fetched_bytes
|
|
this counts how many bytes of ciphertext have been fetched
|
|
from uploading clients
|
|
|
|
encoded_bytes
|
|
this counts how many bytes of ciphertext have been
|
|
encoded and turned into successfully-uploaded shares. If no
|
|
uploads have failed or been abandoned, encoded_bytes should
|
|
eventually equal fetched_bytes.
|
|
|
|
**stats.chk_upload_helper.\***
|
|
|
|
These also track Helper activity:
|
|
|
|
active_uploads
|
|
how many files are currently being uploaded. 0 when idle.
|
|
|
|
incoming_count
|
|
how many cache files are present in the incoming/ directory,
|
|
which holds ciphertext files that are still being fetched
|
|
from the client
|
|
|
|
incoming_size
|
|
total size of cache files in the incoming/ directory
|
|
|
|
incoming_size_old
|
|
total size of 'old' cache files (more than 48 hours)
|
|
|
|
encoding_count
|
|
how many cache files are present in the encoding/ directory,
|
|
which holds ciphertext files that are being encoded and
|
|
uploaded
|
|
|
|
encoding_size
|
|
total size of cache files in the encoding/ directory
|
|
|
|
encoding_size_old
|
|
total size of 'old' cache files (more than 48 hours)
|
|
|
|
**stats.node.uptime**
|
|
how many seconds since the node process was started
|
|
|
|
**stats.cpu_monitor.\***
|
|
|
|
1min_avg, 5min_avg, 15min_avg
|
|
estimate of what percentage of system CPU time was consumed by the
|
|
node process, over the given time interval. Expressed as a float, 0.0
|
|
for 0%, 1.0 for 100%
|
|
|
|
total
|
|
estimate of total number of CPU seconds consumed by node since
|
|
the process was started. Ticket #472 indicates that .total may
|
|
sometimes be negative due to wraparound of the kernel's counter.
|
|
|
|
**stats.load_monitor.\***
|
|
|
|
When enabled, the "load monitor" continually schedules a one-second
|
|
callback, and measures how late the response is. This estimates system load
|
|
(if the system is idle, the response should be on time). This is only
|
|
enabled if a stats-gatherer is configured.
|
|
|
|
avg_load
|
|
average "load" value (seconds late) over the last minute
|
|
|
|
max_load
|
|
maximum "load" value over the last minute
|
|
|
|
|
|
Running a Tahoe Stats-Gatherer Service
|
|
======================================
|
|
|
|
The "stats-gatherer" is a simple daemon that periodically collects stats from
|
|
several tahoe nodes. It could be useful, e.g., in a production environment,
|
|
where you want to monitor dozens of storage servers from a central management
|
|
host. It merely gatherers statistics from many nodes into a single place: it
|
|
does not do any actual analysis.
|
|
|
|
The stats gatherer listens on a network port using the same Foolscap_
|
|
connection library that Tahoe clients use to connect to storage servers.
|
|
Tahoe nodes can be configured to connect to the stats gatherer and publish
|
|
their stats on a periodic basis. (In fact, what happens is that nodes connect
|
|
to the gatherer and offer it a second FURL which points back to the node's
|
|
"stats port", which the gatherer then uses to pull stats on a periodic basis.
|
|
The initial connection is flipped to allow the nodes to live behind NAT
|
|
boxes, as long as the stats-gatherer has a reachable IP address.)
|
|
|
|
.. _Foolscap: https://foolscap.lothar.com/trac
|
|
|
|
The stats-gatherer is created in the same fashion as regular tahoe client
|
|
nodes and introducer nodes. Choose a base directory for the gatherer to live
|
|
in (but do not create the directory). Choose the hostname that should be
|
|
advertised in the gatherer's FURL. Then run:
|
|
|
|
::
|
|
|
|
tahoe create-stats-gatherer --hostname=HOSTNAME $BASEDIR
|
|
|
|
and start it with "tahoe start $BASEDIR". Once running, the gatherer will
|
|
write a FURL into $BASEDIR/stats_gatherer.furl .
|
|
|
|
To configure a Tahoe client/server node to contact the stats gatherer, copy
|
|
this FURL into the node's tahoe.cfg file, in a section named "[client]",
|
|
under a key named "stats_gatherer.furl", like so:
|
|
|
|
::
|
|
|
|
[client]
|
|
stats_gatherer.furl = pb://qbo4ktl667zmtiuou6lwbjryli2brv6t@HOSTNAME:PORTNUM/wxycb4kaexzskubjnauxeoptympyf45y
|
|
|
|
or simply copy the stats_gatherer.furl file into the node's base directory
|
|
(next to the tahoe.cfg file): it will be interpreted in the same way.
|
|
|
|
When the gatherer is created, it will allocate a random unused TCP port, so
|
|
it should not conflict with anything else that you have running on that host
|
|
at that time. To explicitly control which port it uses, run the creation
|
|
command with ``--location=`` and ``--port=`` instead of ``--hostname=``. If
|
|
you use a hostname of ``example.org`` and a port number of ``1234``, then
|
|
run::
|
|
|
|
tahoe create-stats-gatherer --location=tcp:example.org:1234 --port=tcp:1234
|
|
|
|
``--location=`` is a Foolscap FURL hints string (so it can be a
|
|
comma-separated list of connection hints), and ``--port=`` is a Twisted
|
|
"server endpoint specification string", as described in :doc:`configuration`.
|
|
|
|
Once running, the stats gatherer will create a standard JSON file in
|
|
``$BASEDIR/stats.json``. Once a minute, the gatherer will pull stats
|
|
information from every connected node and write them into the file. The file
|
|
will contain a dictionary, in which node identifiers (known as "tubid"
|
|
strings) are the keys, and the values are a dict with 'timestamp',
|
|
'nickname', and 'stats' keys. d[tubid][stats] will contain the stats
|
|
dictionary as made available at http://localhost:3456/statistics?t=json . The
|
|
file will only contain the most recent update from each node.
|
|
|
|
Other tools can be built to examine these stats and render them into
|
|
something useful. For example, a tool could sum the
|
|
"storage_server.disk_avail' values from all servers to compute a
|
|
total-disk-available number for the entire grid (however, the "disk watcher"
|
|
daemon, in misc/operations_helpers/spacetime/, is better suited for this
|
|
specific task).
|
|
|
|
Using Munin To Graph Stats Values
|
|
=================================
|
|
|
|
The misc/operations_helpers/munin/ directory contains various plugins to
|
|
graph stats for Tahoe nodes. They are intended for use with the Munin_
|
|
system-management tool, which typically polls target systems every 5 minutes
|
|
and produces a web page with graphs of various things over multiple time
|
|
scales (last hour, last month, last year).
|
|
|
|
Most of the plugins are designed to pull stats from a single Tahoe node, and
|
|
are configured with the e.g. http://localhost:3456/statistics?t=json URL. The
|
|
"tahoe_stats" plugin is designed to read from the JSON file created by the
|
|
stats-gatherer. Some plugins are to be used with the disk watcher, and a few
|
|
(like tahoe_nodememory) are designed to watch the node processes directly
|
|
(and must therefore run on the same host as the target node).
|
|
|
|
Please see the docstrings at the beginning of each plugin for details, and
|
|
the "tahoe-conf" file for notes about configuration and installing these
|
|
plugins into a Munin environment.
|
|
|
|
.. _Munin: http://munin-monitoring.org/
|