Provided by: pcp_6.3.3-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       clustervis - visualize cpu and network performance on a cluster

SYNOPSIS

       clustervis [-H nodesfile] [-h host[,host...]]  [-a archive[,archive...]]  [-m max] [pmview options]

DESCRIPTION

       clustervis  displays  three dimensional bar charts of CPU utilization and network traffic for one or most
       hosts in a cluster.  An alternative two dimensional cluster performance monitoring tool is pmgcluster(1).
       clustervis is designed to provide a scalable overview of the performance of large clusters.  Other  tools
       such  as  pmchart(1)  and  pmgsys(1)  provide drill-down details on a per-host basis.  These tools may be
       launched by clicking on the purple base plane for a particular host and then selecting a  tool  from  the
       launch menu in clustervis.

       The  -H,  -h and -a arguments are all mutually exclusive and have the following semantics; if none of -H,
       -h or -a is given, and either the file /etc/nodes or /etc/ace/nodes exists,  or  the  $PCP_CLUSTER_CONFIG
       environment  variable  is  set,  then use the named file as the set of hosts for live monitoring.  If the
       default nodes file does not exist, the environment variable is not set and none of the three  flags  were
       given, an error is reported.  Otherwise, if -H is given, then the set of hosts is given in nodesfile.

       The  -h  flag specifies one or more (comma separated with no spaces) hosts for live monitoring and the -a
       flag specifies one or more archives for archive replay (comma separated).

       The height of the CPU stack is proportional to the CPU  utilization  in  each  of  the  modes  sys  (red,
       executing  in  the  kernel) and user (blue, executing user code).  The network traffic stack is shown for
       each network interface as the packet rate in (light blue), out (orange) and errors (red).  The  hight  of
       the  network  stack  is  modulated  by the -m argument, with a default of 750 packets/second representing
       saturated network traffic.

       clustervis generates a pmview(1) configuration file, and passes most command line options  to  pmview(1).
       Therefore,  the  command  line  options  -A,  -a, -C, -h, -n, -O, -p, -S, -t, -T, -Z and -z, and the user
       interface are described in the pmview(1) man page.

FILES

       $PCP_VAR_DIR/config/pmlogger/config.clustervis
                 A pmlogger(1) configuration file for clustervis metrics.
       /usr/pcp/lib/pmview-args
                 Shell procedures for parsing pmview(1) command line options.
       /etc/nodes
                 Default set of hosts in the cluster.

PCP ENVIRONMENT

       The PCP_CLUSTER_CONFIG environment variable may be used to specify the  default  nodes  file  instead  of
       using  the  -H  flag.  Each  line  in  the  file  is  a  host name (or a comment starting with #).  Other
       environment variables with the prefix PCP_ are used to parameterize the file and directory names used  by
       PCP.   On  each  installation, the file /etc/pcp.conf contains the local values for these variables.  The
       $PCP_CONF variable may be used to specify an alternative configuration file, as described in pcp.conf(4).

SEE ALSO

       dkvis(1), mpvis(1), nfsvis(1), pmcd(1), pmchart(1), pmlogger(1), pmview(1), pcp.conf(4) and pcp.env(4).

       The CPU view for pmchart(1).

Performance Co-Pilot                                                                               CLUSTERVIS(1)