#!/bin/sh # # Plugin to monitor the load average on a system. # # Usage: Link or copy into /etc/munin/plugins # # Parameters # env.load_warn # env.load_crit # # Magic markers (optional - only used by munin-config and some # installation scripts): # #%# family=auto #%# capabilities=autoconf # If run with the "autoconf"-parameter, give our opinion on wether we # should be run on this system or not. This is optinal, and only used by # munin-config. In the case of this plugin, we should most probably # always be included. if [ "$1" = "autoconf" ]; then echo yes exit 0 fi # If run with the "config"-parameter, give out information on how the # graphs should look. if [ "$1" = "config" ]; then LOAD_WARN=${load_warn:-10} LOAD_CRIT=${load_crit:-120} # The host name this plugin is for. (Can be overridden to have # one machine answer for several) # The title of the graph echo 'graph_title Load average' # Arguments to "rrdtool graph". In this case, tell it that the # lower limit of the graph is '0', and that 1k=1000 (not 1024) echo 'graph_args --base 1000 -l 0' # The Y-axis label echo 'graph_vlabel load' # We want Cur/Min/Avg/Max unscaled (i.e. 0.42 load instead of # 420 milliload) echo 'graph_scale no' # Graph category. Defaults to 'other' echo 'graph_category system' # The fields. "label" is used in the legend. "label" is the only # required subfield. echo 'load.label load' # These two are optional. They are only used if you have # configured your munin to tell a Nagios-server about any # problems echo "load.warning $LOAD_WARN" echo "load.critical $LOAD_CRIT" # This one is purely to add an explanation to the web page. The first # one is for the graph itself, while the second one is for the field # "load". echo 'graph_info The load average of the machine describes how many processes are in the run-queue (scheduled to run "immediately").' echo 'load.info Average load for the five minutes.' # Last, if run with the "config"-parameter, quit here (don't # display any data) exit 0 fi # If not run with any parameters at all (or only unknown ones), do the # real work - i.e. display the data. Almost always this will be # "value" subfield for every data field. echo -n "load.value " cut -f2 -d' ' < /proc/loadavg