Hi Michael: Any chance you can also work on merging the ganglia.aix.spec file back to the mainstream .spec file? I'm about to change configure.in to only include the specific spec file depending on the OS, but I think the better solution is just to merge the two. Right now I cannot just generate the distribution tarball and run 'rpmbuild -ta' since there are 2 spec files.
Thanks in advance, Bernard On 4/2/07, Michael Perzl <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi Martin, if possible I would like to somehow take my version (after some reviewing) :-) , as it contains all the new POWER5 stuff already. My understanding is - as it would require some changes to protocol.x - that my changes won't have a chance to get into the core Ganglia source code until version 3.1 comes along. This code and everything else (RPMs) can be found on my website http://www.perzl.org/ganglia/. This stuff is actually in use at quite many customer sites already (runs on AIX 4.3.3, 5.1, 5.2 and 5.3) so I would like to keep that POWER5-stuff in if possible. Actually, an AIX gmond implementation without the POWER5-stuff based on my implementation could be done very easy (just stripping off the POWER5-addons). Regards, Michael Martin Knoblauch wrote: Michael, Andreas, any chance that you could consolidate the two versions of the AIX metrics that seem to be around? Seem you are the ones who have worked most recently on the AIX implementation. Cheers Martin --- Michael Perzl <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Andreas, thank you for taking the blame but you are off the hook here. ;-) If I understood David correctly, he is using my AIX Ganglia RPM packages with POWER5 extensions. Here most if not all implementation of how the metrics are collected under AIX have been changed. Everything is documented on my homepage (http://www.perzl.org/ganglia/) though. So everything what goes wrong here is entiremy my fault :-[ After some investigating and some discussions with Nigel I have come to terms with the following facts regarding the bytes_in/bytes_out problem: - libperfstat (the library on AIX which obtains all the system performance data) uses u_longlong_t data types (these are definitely 64-bit large). - The AIX kernel internally, though, may probably not be using 64-bit data types - more realistic is probably unsigned 32-bit - in order not to break compatibility (my personal opinion) - The consequence now is that integer overrun may occur much easier with 32-bit data types than with 64-bit data types (we all probably don't live long enough to see that happen). Please take a look at my implementation of the bytes_in metric (the bytes_out implementation is accordingly): 01 g_val_t 02 bytes_in_func( void ) 03 { 04 g_val_t val; 05 perfstat_netinterface_total_t n; 06 static u_longlong_t last_bytes_in = 0, bytes_in; 07 static double last_time = 0.0; 08 double now, delta_t; 09 struct timeval timeValue; 10 struct timezone timeZone; 11 12 gettimeofday( &timeValue, &timeZone ); 13 14 now = (double) (timeValue.tv_sec - boottime) + (timeValue.tv_usec / 1000000.0); 15 16 if (perfstat_netinterface_total( NULL, &n, sizeof( perfstat_netinterface_total_t ), 1 ) == -1) 17 val.f = 0.0; 18 else 19 { 20 bytes_in = n.ibytes; 21 22 delta_t = now - last_time; 23 24 if ( delta_t ) 25 val.f = (double) (bytes_in - last_bytes_in) / delta_t; 26 else 27 val.f = 0.0; 28 29 last_bytes_in = bytes_in; 30 } 31 32 last_time = now; 33 34 return( val ); 35 } In my opinion the overrun occurs in line #25 when "bytes_in < last_bytes_in". In my naivity I had assumed as both are of type u_longlong_t that an integer overrun might never happen. So to solve the overrun a check for "bytes_in < last_bytes_in" must be introduced, something like: u_longlong_t d; d = bytes_in - last_bytes_in; if (d < 0) d += ULONG_MAX; and line #25 would essentially become 25 val.f = (double) d / delta_t; Comments ? Regards, Michael PS: David, the reason why you don't see it happen with pkts_in and pkts_out is that probably no overrun so far has occurred but at some point it will also happen. PPS: David, if this is a solution (I want some comments on that before, though) then I would be building new RPMs with the then hopefully correct code. Andreas Schoenfeld wrote: Hi David and Martin, I suppose the network code is still the code I wrote, so there are two problems I know of: 1. yes there is a problem with owerflows 2. the shown network traffic is the sum of all network interfaces including local loopback devices (lo0...). Both Problems could lead to astonishing data transfer rate in ganglia. Sorry I had promised to fix the problems, but there was to much other work ... Best regards Andreas Date: Thu, 29 Mar 2007 08:21:38 -0700 (PDT) From: Martin Knoblauch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Subject: Re: [Ganglia-general] Help! I have a petabyte/s network To: David Wong <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED] Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1 David, good catch. I will have to look at it for a bit. Cheers Martin --- David Wong <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: I don't write much code nowadays, so I'm going to need a lot of help with this. I dug through the ganglia code and I found this interesting tidbit in libmetrics/aix/metrics.c which may be indicative of the problem. There's an assignment from cur_ninfo.ibytes to cur_net_stat.ibytes, but the types of the two variables are different. net_stat::ibytes is a double: struct net_stat{ double ipackets; double opackets; double ibytes; double obytes; } cur_net_stat; and we have *ninfo declared here: perfstat_netinterface_total_t ninfo[2],*last_ninfo, *cur_ninfo ; libperfstat.h has perfstat_netinterface_total_t::ibytes as u_longlong_t. Does this code try to do what I think it is doing, i.e. assign an unsigned 64 bit integer to a signed 64bit integer? I'm willing to test the code if someone who's more adept at coding and building will take on the challenge. It looks to me that the type mismatch will have to fixed in a few places, such as CALC_NETSTAT, and we'll have to add an unsigned long long to g_val_t too. Those are the ones I can see so far. David Wong Senior Systems Engineer Management Dynamics, Inc. Phone: 201-804-6127 [EMAIL PROTECTED] -----Original Message----- From: Martin Knoblauch [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Wednesday, March 28, 2007 12:00 PM To: David Wong; [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: [Ganglia-general] Help! I have a petabyte/s network David, as far as I remember, the AIX metrics code had an overflow/wrap-around problem prior to 3.0.4. Maybe the fixes are not thorough enough. The packets/sec are of course less affected. Cheers Martin ------------------------------------------------------ Martin Knoblauch email: k n o b i AT knobisoft DOT de www: http://www.knobisoft.de ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Take Surveys. Earn Cash. 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