Provided by: libpcp3-dev_6.3.3-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       pmNewContext - establish a new PMAPI context

C SYNOPSIS

       #include <pcp/pmapi.h>

       int pmNewContext(int type, const char *name);

       cc ... -lpcp

DESCRIPTION

       An  application  using  the  Performance Metrics Application Programming Interface (PMAPI) may manipulate
       several concurrent contexts, each associated with a source of performance metrics, e.g. pmcd(1)  on  some
       host,  or a set of archives of performance metrics as created by pmlogger(1), or a stand-alone connection
       on the local host that does not involve pmcd(1).

       pmNewContext may be used to establish a new context.  The source of the metrics is  identified  by  name,
       and  may be either a host name (type is PM_CONTEXT_HOST), or a comma-separated list of names referring to
       a set of archives (type is PM_CONTEXT_ARCHIVE).  Each element of the list may either  be  the  base  name
       common to all of the physical files of an archive or the name of a directory containing archives.

       For  a  type  of  PM_CONTEXT_HOST,  in addition to identifying a host the name may also be used to encode
       additional optional information in the form of a pmcd(1) port number, a pmproxy(1) hostname and  a  proxy
       port number. For example the name "app23:14321,4321@firewall.example.com:11111" specifies a connection on
       port  14321  (or  port  4321  if  14321  is  unavailable)  to pmcd(1) on the host app23 via port 11111 to
       pmproxy(1) on the host firewall.example.com.

       Alternatively, for a type of PM_CONTEXT_HOST, name may be unix: for an authenticated Unix  domain  socket
       connection  to  pmcd(1)  on  the  localhost  or  local: for an authenticated connection to pmcd(1) on the
       localhost via a Unix domain socket if available, else via an internet  socket  connection  to  localhost.
       local:  is  the default choice for most applications when calling pmNewContext to establish a context for
       pmcd(1) on the local host.

       For a type of PM_CONTEXT_ARCHIVE, each element of the list of names in name may also be the name  of  any
       of  the  physical  files  of an archive, e.g.  myarchive.meta (the metadata file) or myarchive.index (the
       temporal  index)  or  myarchive.0  (the  first  data  volume  of  the  archive)  or  myarchive.0.bz2   or
       myarchive.0.bz  (the  first  data  volume compressed with bzip2(1)) or myarchive.0.gz or myarchive.0.Z or
       myarchive.0.z (the first  data  volume  compressed  with  gzip(1)),  myarchive.1  or  myarchive.3.bz2  or
       myarchive.42.gz etc.

       If  more  than  one archive is specified for a type of PM_CONTEXT_ARCHIVE, there are some restrictions on
       the archives within the set:
       •  The archives must all have been generated on the same host.
       •  The archives must not overlap in time.
       •  The archives must all have been created using the same time zone.
       •  The PMID of each metric should be the same in all of  the  archives.   Multiple  PMIDs  are  currently
          tolerated by using the first PMID defined for each metric and ignoring subsequent PMIDs.
       •  The type of each metric must be the same in all of the archives.
       •  The semantics of each metric must be the same in all of the archives.
       •  The units of each metric must be the same in all of the archives.
       •  The instance domain of each metric must be the same in all of the archives.

       In  the  case  where  type  is  PM_CONTEXT_LOCAL,  name  is  ignored,  and the context uses a stand-alone
       connection to the PMDA methods used by pmcd(1).  The mechanism in the library uses  the  same  ``plugin''
       architecture  that  operates  between  pmcd(1) and DSO PMDAs, so operations involve function calls rather
       than IPC message passing - for PM_CONTEXT_LOCAL contexts this may mean lower latency for operations  like
       pmFetch(3),  but  at  the  cost  of  longer  initialization  time and possible access control differences
       compared to pmcd(1).  When this type of context is used, the range of accessible performance  metrics  is
       constrained   to   those   from   the   DSO   PMDAs   defined   in   the   pmcd(1)   configuration   file
       /etc/pcp/pmcd/pmcd.conf, so those reported by the command
               $ awk '$3 == "dso" {print}' /etc/pcp/pmcd/pmcd.conf
       or alternatively reported by the command
               $ pminfo -f pmcd.agent.type | grep 'value 0'
       This usually means the PMDA exporting metrics from the operating system and the ``pmcd'', ``pmproxy'' and
       may includes some others like ``mmv''.  Alternate DSO PMDAs can be used, refer to pmSpecLocalPMDA(3).

       In the case where type is PM_CONTEXT_HOST, additional flags can be added to the type to indicate  if  the
       connection  to  pmcd(1) should be encrypted (PM_CTXFLAG_SECURE), deferred (PM_CTXFLAG_SHALLOW) and if the
       file  descriptor  used  to  communicate  with   pmcd(1),   should   not   be   shared   across   contexts
       (PM_CTXFLAG_EXCLUSIVE).   Both  the  PM_CTXFLAG_SHALLOW and PM_CTXFLAG_EXCLUSIVE flags are now deprecated
       and ignored.

       When type is PM_CONTEXT_ARCHIVE, additional flags can be added to the type for restricted handling of the
       archive  suited  to  applications  that  are  aware  of   the   structure   of   PCP   archives,   namely
       PM_CTXFLAG_NO_FEATURE_CHECK   (do  not  check  feature  compatibility  for  archive  label  records)  and
       PM_CTXFLAG_METADATA_ONLY (open only the metadata, not the data volume(s) nor the index).  Currently these
       additional flags are only used by pmlogrewrite(1) and pmlogdump(1).

       The initial instance profile is set up to select all instances in all instance domains.  In the case of a
       set of archives, the initial collection time is also set to zero, so  that  an  initial  pmFetch(3)  will
       result in the earliest set of metrics being returned from the set of archives.

       Once  established, the association between a context and a source of metrics is fixed for the life of the
       context, however routines are provided  to  independently  manipulate  both  the  instance  profile  (see
       pmAddProfile(3) and pmDelProfile(3)) and the collection time for archives (see pmSetMode(3)).

       pmNewContext returns a handle that may be used with subsequent calls to pmUseContext(3).

       The  new  context  remains  the  current  PMAPI  context for all subsequent calls across the PMAPI, until
       another call to  pmNewContext(3)  is  made,  or  the  context  is  explicitly  changed  with  a  call  to
       pmDupContext(3) or pmUseContext(3), or destroyed using pmDestroyContext(3).

       When  attempting  to  connect  to  a  remote  pmcd(1)  on  a  machine that is booting, pmNewContext could
       potentially block for a long time until the remote machine  finishes  its  initialization.   pmNewContext
       will  abort  and return an error if the connection has not been established after some specified interval
       has elapsed.  The default interval is 5 seconds.  This may be modified by setting PMCD_CONNECT_TIMEOUT in
       the environment to a real number of seconds for the desired timeout.  This is most useful in cases  where
       the  remote  host is at the end of a slow network, requiring longer latencies to establish the connection
       correctly.

CAVEATS

       When using a type of PM_CONTEXT_LOCAL, the operating system PMDA may export data structures directly from
       the kernel, which means that the pmNewContext caller should be an executable  program  compiled  for  the
       same object code format as the booted kernel.

       In  addition,  applications  using a PM_CONTEXT_LOCAL context must be single-threaded because the various
       DSO PMDAs may not be thread-safe.  This restriction is enforced  at  the  PMAPI(3),  where  routines  may
       return the error code PM_ERR_THREAD if the library detects calls from more than one thread.

       Applications  that  use  gethostbyname(3)  should  exercise  caution  because the static fields in struct
       hostent  may  not  be  preserved  across  some  PMAPI(3)  calls.   In  particular,  pmNewContext(3)   and
       pmReconnectContext(3) both may call gethostbyname(3) internally.

DIAGNOSTICS

       PM_ERR_PERMISSION

              No permission to perform requested operation

       PM_ERR_CONNLIMIT

              PMCD connection limit for this host exceeded

       PM_ERR_NOCONTEXT

              Requested context type was not PM_CONTEXT_LOCAL, PM_CONTEXT_HOST or PM_CONTEXT_ARCHIVE.

       PM_ERR_LOGOVERLAP

              Archives overlap in time

       PM_ERR_LOGHOST

              Archives differ by host

       PM_ERR_LOGCHANGETYPE

              The type of a metric differs among archives

       PM_ERR_LOGCHANGESEM

              The semantics of a metric differs among archives

       PM_ERR_LOGCHANGEINDOM

              The instance domain of a metric differs among archives

       PM_ERR_LOGCHANGEUNITS

              The units of a metric differs among archives

ENVIRONMENT

       PMCD_CONNECT_TIMEOUT
              Timeout period (in seconds) for pmcd(1) connection attempts.

       PMCD_PORT
              TCP/IP  port(s)  for connecting to pmcd(1), historically was 4321 and more recently the officially
              registered port 44321; in the current release, pmcd listens on both these ports as a  transitional
              arrangement.  If used, should be set to a comma-separated list of numerical port numbers.

SEE ALSO

       pmcd(1),   pminfo(1),   pmproxy(1),   PMAPI(3),  pmAddProfile(3),  pmDelProfile(3),  pmDestroyContext(3),
       pmDupContext(3), pmFetch(3),  pmGetConfig(3),  pmReconnectContext(3),  pmSetMode(3),  pmSpecLocalPMDA(3),
       pmUseContext(3), pmWhichContext(3), pcp.conf(5) and pcp.env(5).

Performance Co-Pilot                                   PCP                                       PMNEWCONTEXT(3)