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PT-STALK(1) User Contributed Perl Documentation PT-STALK(1)
NAME
pt-stalk - Collect forensic data about MySQL when problems occur.
SYNOPSIS
Usage: pt-stalk [OPTIONS]
pt-stalk waits for a trigger condition to occur, then collects data to
help diagnose problems. The tool is designed to run as a daemon with
root privileges, so that you can diagnose intermittent problems that
you cannot observe directly. You can also use it to execute a custom
command, or to collect data on demand without waiting for the trigger
to occur.
RISKS
Percona Toolkit is mature, proven in the real world, and well tested,
but all database tools can pose a risk to the system and the database
server. Before using this tool, please:
o Read the tool's documentation
o Review the tool's known "BUGS"
o Test the tool on a non-production server
o Backup your production server and verify the backups
DESCRIPTION
Sometimes a problem happens infrequently and for a short time, giving
you no chance to see the system when it happens. How do you solve
intermittent MySQL problems when you can't observe them? That's why pt-
stalk exists. In addition to using it when there's a known problem on
your servers, it is a good idea to run pt-stalk all the time, even when
you think nothing is wrong. You will appreciate the data it collects
when a problem occurs, because problems such as MySQL lockups or spikes
in activity typically leave no evidence to use in root cause analysis.
pt-stalk does two things: it watches a MySQL server and waits for a
trigger condition to occur, and it collects diagnostic data when that
trigger occurs. To avoid false-positives caused by short-lived
problems, the trigger condition must be true at least "--cycles" times
before a "--collect" is triggered.
To use pt-stalk effectively, you need to define a good trigger. A good
trigger is sensitive enough to fire reliably when a problem occurs, so
that you don't miss a chance to solve problems. On the other hand, a
good trigger isn't prone to false positives, so you don't gather
information when the server is functioning normally.
The most reliable triggers for MySQL tend to be the number of
connections to the server, and the number of queries running
concurrently. These are available in the SHOW GLOBAL STATUS command as
Threads_connected and Threads_running. Sometimes Threads_connected is
not a reliable indicator of trouble, but Threads_running usually is.
Your job, as the tool's user, is to define an appropriate trigger
condition for the tool. Choose carefully, because the quality of your
results will depend on the trigger you choose.
You define the trigger with the "--function", "--variable",
"--threshold", and "--cycles" options. The default values for these
options define a reasonable trigger, but you should adjust or change
them to suite your particular system and needs.
By default, pt-stalk tool watches MySQL forever until the trigger
occurs, then it collects diagnostic data for a while, and sleeps
afterwards to avoid repeatedly collecting data if the trigger remains
true. The general order of operations is:
while true; do
if --variable from --function > --threshold; then
cycles_true++
if cycles_true >= --cycles; then
--notify-by-email
if --collect; then
if --disk-bytes-free and --disk-pct-free ok; then
(--collect for --run-time seconds) &
fi
rm files in --dest older than --retention-time
fi
iter++
cycles_true=0
fi
if iter < --iterations; then
sleep --sleep seconds
else
break
fi
else
if iter < --iterations; then
sleep --interval seconds
else
break
fi
fi
done
rm old --dest files older than --retention-time
if --collect process are still running; then
wait up to --run-time * 3 seconds
kill any remaining --collect processes
fi
The diagnostic data is written to files whose names begin with a
timestamp, so you can distinguish samples from each other in case the
tool collects data multiple times. The pt-sift tool is designed to
help you browse and analyze the resulting data samples.
Although this sounds simple enough, in practice there are a number of
subtleties, such as detecting when the disk is beginning to fill up so
that the tool doesn't cause the server to run out of disk space. This
tool handles these types of potential problems, so it's a good idea to
use this tool instead of writing something from scratch and possibly
experiencing some of the hazards this tool is designed to avoid.
CONFIGURING
You can use standard Percona Toolkit configuration files to set command
line options.
You will probably want to run the tool as a daemon and customize at
least the "--threshold". Here's a sample configuration file for
triggering when there are more than 20 queries running at once:
daemonize
threshold=20
If you don't run the tool as root, then you will need specify several
options, such as "--pid", "--log", and "--dest", else the tool will
probably fail to start.
OPTIONS
--ask-pass
Prompt for a password when connecting to MySQL.
--collect
default: yes; negatable: yes
Collect diagnostic data when the trigger occurs. Specify
"--no-collect" to make the tool watch the system but not collect
data.
See also "--stalk".
--collect-gdb
Collect GDB stacktraces. This is achieved by attaching to MySQL
and printing stack traces from all threads. This will freeze the
server for some period of time, ranging from a second or so to much
longer on very busy systems with a lot of memory and many threads
in the server. For this reason, it is disabled by default.
However, if you are trying to diagnose a server stall or lockup,
freezing the server causes no additional harm, and the stack traces
can be vital for diagnosis.
In addition to freezing the server, there is also some risk of the
server crashing or performing badly after GDB detaches from it.
--collect-oprofile
Collect oprofile data. This is achieved by starting an oprofile
session, letting it run for the collection time, and then stopping
and saving the resulting profile data in the system's default
location. Please read your system's oprofile documentation to
learn more about this.
--collect-strace
Collect strace data. This is achieved by attaching strace to the
server, which will make it run very slowly until strace detaches.
The same cautions apply as those listed in --collect-gdb. You
should not enable this option together with --collect-gdb, because
GDB and strace can't attach to the server process simultaneously.
--collect-tcpdump
Collect tcpdump data. This option causes tcpdump to capture all
traffic on all interfaces for the port on which MySQL is listening.
You can later use pt-query-digest to decode the MySQL protocol and
extract a log of query traffic from it.
--config
type: string
Read this comma-separated list of config files. If specified, this
must be the first option on the command line.
--cycles
type: int; default: 5
How many times "--variable" must be greater than "--threshold"
before triggering "--collect". This helps prevent false positives,
and makes the trigger condition less likely to fire when the
problem recovers quickly.
--daemonize
Daemonize the tool. This causes the tool to fork into the
background and log its output as specified in --log.
--defaults-file
short form: -F; type: string
Only read mysql options from the given file. You must give an
absolute pathname.
--dest
type: string; default: /var/lib/pt-stalk
Where to save diagnostic data from "--collect". Each time the tool
collects data, it writes to a new set of files, which are named
with the current system timestamp.
--disk-bytes-free
type: size; default: 100M
Do not "--collect" if the disk has less than this much free space.
This prevents the tool from filling up the disk with diagnostic
data.
If the "--dest" directory contains a previously captured sample of
data, the tool will measure its size and use that as an estimate of
how much data is likely to be gathered this time, too. It will
then be even more pessimistic, and will refuse to collect data
unless the disk has enough free space to hold the sample and still
have the desired amount of free space. For example, if you'd like
100MB of free space and the previous diagnostic sample consumed
100MB, the tool won't collect any data unless the disk has 200MB
free.
Valid size value suffixes are k, M, G, and T.
--disk-pct-free
type: int; default: 5
Do not "--collect" if the disk has less than this percent free
space. This prevents the tool from filling up the disk with
diagnostic data.
This option works similarly to "--disk-bytes-free" but specifies a
percentage margin of safety instead of a bytes margin of safety.
The tool honors both options, and will not collect any data unless
both margins are satisfied.
--function
type: string; default: status
What to watch for the trigger. The default value watches "SHOW
GLOBAL STATUS", but you can also watch "SHOW PROCESSLIST" and
specify a file with your own custom code. This function supplies
the value of "--variable", which is then compared against
"--threshold" to see if the the trigger condition is met.
Additional options may be required as well; see below. Possible
values are:
o status
Watch "SHOW GLOBAL STATUS" for the trigger. The value of
"--variable" then defines which status counter is the trigger.
o processlist
Watch "SHOW FULL PROCESSLIST" for the trigger. The trigger
value is the count of processes whose "--variable" column
matches the "--match" option. For example, to trigger
"--collect" when more than 10 processes are in the "statistics"
state, specify:
--function processlist \
--variable State \
--match statistics \
--threshold 10
In addition, you can specify a file that contains your custom
trigger function, written in Unix shell script. This can be a
wrapper that executes anything you wish. If the argument to
"--function" is a file, then it takes precedence over built-in
functions, so if there is a file in the working directory named
"status" or "processlist" then the tool will use that file even
though are valid built-in values.
The file works by providing a function called "trg_plugin", and the
tool simply sources the file and executes the function. For
example, the file might contain:
trg_plugin() {
mysql $EXT_ARGV -e "SHOW ENGINE INNODB STATUS" \
| grep -c "has waited at"
}
This snippet will count the number of mutex waits inside InnoDB.
It illustrates the general principle: the function must output a
number, which is then compared to "--threshold" as usual. The
$EXT_ARGV variable contains the MySQL options mentioned in the
"SYNOPSIS" above.
The file should not alter the tool's existing global variables.
Prefix any file-specific global variables with "PLUGIN_" or make
them local.
--help
Print help and exit.
--host
short form: -h; type: string
Host to connect to.
--interval
type: int; default: 1
How often to check the if trigger is true, in seconds.
--iterations
type: int
How many times to "--collect" diagnostic data. By default, the
tool runs forever and collects data every time the trigger occurs.
Specify "--iterations" to collect data a limited number of times.
This option is also useful with "--no-stalk" to collect data once
and exit, for example.
--log
type: string; default: /var/log/pt-stalk.log
Print all output to this file when daemonized.
--match
type: string
The pattern to use when watching SHOW PROCESSLIST. See
"--function" for details.
--notify-by-email
type: string
Send an email to these addresses for every "--collect".
--password
short form: -p; type: string
Password to use when connecting.
--pid
type: string; default: /var/run/pt-stalk.pid
Create the given PID file. The tool won't start if the PID file
already exists and the PID it contains is different than the
current PID. However, if the PID file exists and the PID it
contains is no longer running, the tool will overwrite the PID file
with the current PID. The PID file is removed automatically when
the tool exits.
--plugin
type: string
Load a plugin to hook into the tool and extend is functionality.
The specified file does not need to be executable, nor does its
first line need to be shebang line. It only needs to define one or
more of these Bash functions:
before_stalk
Called before stalking.
before_collect
Called when the trigger occurs, before running a "--collect"
subprocesses in the background.
after_collect
Called after running a collector process. The PID of the
collector process is passed as the first argument. This hook
is called before "after_collect_sleep".
after_collect_sleep
Called after sleeping "--sleep" seconds for the collector
process to finish. This hook is called after "after_collect".
after_interval_sleep
Called after sleeping "--interval" seconds after each trigger
check.
after_stalk
Called after stalking. Since pt-stalk stalks forever by
default, this hook is only called if "--iterations" is
specified.
For example, a very simple plugin that touches a file when
"--collect" is triggered:
before_collect() {
touch /tmp/foo
}
Since the plugin is completely sourced (imported) into the tool's
namespace, be careful not to define other functions or global
variables that already exist in the tool. You should prefix all
plugin-specific functions and global variables with "plugin_" or
"PLUGIN_".
Plugins have access to all command line options but they should not
modify them. Each option is a global variable like $OPT_DEST which
corresponds to "--dest". Therefore, the global variable for each
command line option is "OPT_" plus the option name in all caps with
hyphens replaced by underscores.
Plugins can stop the tool by setting the global variable "OKTORUN"
to 1. In this case, the global variable "EXIT_REASON" should also
be set to indicate why the tool was stopped.
Plugin writers should keep in mind that the file destination prefix
currently in use should be accessed through the $prefix variable,
rather than $OPT_PREFIX.
--port
short form: -P; type: int
Port number to use for connection.
--prefix
type: string
The filename prefix for diagnostic samples. By default, all files
created by the same "--collect" instance have a timestamp prefix
based on the current local time, like "2011_12_06_14_02_02", which
is December 6, 2011 at 14:02:02.
--retention-time
type: int; default: 30
Number of days to retain collected samples. Any samples that are
older will be purged.
--run-time
type: int; default: 30
How long to "--collect" diagnostic data when the trigger occurs.
The value is in seconds and should not be longer than "--sleep".
It is usually not necessary to change this; if the default 30
seconds doesn't collect enough data, running longer is not likely
to help because the system or MySQL server is probably too busy to
respond. In fact, in many cases a shorter collection period is
appropriate.
This value is used two other times. After collecting, the collect
subprocess will wait another "--run-time" seconds for its commands
to finish. Some commands can take awhile if the system is running
very slowly (which can likely be the case given that a collection
was triggered). Since empty files are deleted, the extra wait
gives commands time to finish and write their data. The value is
potentially used again just before the tool exits to wait again for
any collect subprocesses to finish. In most cases this won't
happen because of the aforementioned extra wait. If it happens,
the tool will log "Waiting up to N seconds for subprocesses to
finish..." where N is three times "--run-time". In both cases,
after waiting, the tool kills all of its subprocesses.
--sleep
type: int; default: 300
How long to sleep after "--collect". This prevents the tool from
triggering continuously, which might be a problem if the collection
process is intrusive. It also prevents filling up the disk or
gathering too much data to analyze reasonably.
--sleep-collect
type: int; default: 1
How long to sleep between collection loop cycles. This is useful
with "--no-stalk" to do long collections. For example, to collect
data every minute for an hour, specify: "--no-stalk --run-time 3600
--sleep-collect 60".
--socket
short form: -S; type: string
Socket file to use for connection.
--stalk
default: yes; negatable: yes
Watch the server and wait for the trigger to occur. Specify
"--no-stalk" to collect diagnostic data immediately, that is,
without waiting for the trigger to occur. You probably also want
to specify values for "--interval", "--iterations", and "--sleep".
For example, to immediately collect data for 1 minute then exit,
specify:
--no-stalk --run-time 60 --iterations 1
"--cycles", "--daemonize", "--log" and "--pid" have no effect with
"--no-stalk". Safeguard options, like "--disk-bytes-free" and
"--disk-pct-free", are still respected.
See also "--collect".
--threshold
type: int; default: 25
The maximum acceptable value for "--variable". "--collect" is
triggered when the value of "--variable" is greater than
"--threshold" for "--cycles" many times. Currently, there is no
way to define a lower threshold to check for a "--variable" value
that is too low.
See also "--function".
--user
short form: -u; type: string
User for login if not current user.
--variable
type: string; default: Threads_running
The variable to compare against "--threshold". See also
"--function".
--verbose
type: int; default: 2
Print more or less information while running. Since the tool is
designed to be a long-running daemon, the default verbosity level
only prints the most important information. If you run the tool
interactively, you may want to use a higher verbosity level.
LEVEL PRINTS
===== =====================================
0 Errors
1 Warnings
2 Matching triggers and collection info
3 Non-matching triggers
--version
Print tool's version and exit.
ENVIRONMENT
This tool does not require any environment variables for configuration,
although it can be influenced to work differently by through several
variables. Keep in mind that these are expert settings, and should not
be used in most cases.
Specifically, the variables that can be set are:
CMD_GDB
CMD_IOSTAT
CMD_MPSTAT
CMD_MYSQL
CMD_MYSQLADMIN
CMD_OPCONTROL
CMD_OPREPORT
CMD_PMAP
CMD_STRACE
CMD_SYSCTL
CMD_TCPDUMP
CMD_VMSTAT
For example, during collection iostat is called with a -dx argument,
but because you have an NFS partition, you also need the -n flag there.
Instead of editing the source, you can call pt-stalk as
CMD_IOSTAT="iostat -n" pt-stalk ...
which will do exactly what you need. Combined with the plugin hooks,
this gives you a fine-grained control of what the tool does.
SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS
This tool requires Bash v3 or newer. Certain options require other
programs:
"--collect-gdb" requires "gdb"
"--collect-oprofile" requires "opcontrol" and "opreport"
"--collect-strace" requires "strace"
"--collect-tcpdump" requires "tcpdump"
BUGS
For a list of known bugs, see <http://www.percona.com/bugs/pt-stalk>.
Please report bugs at <https://bugs.launchpad.net/percona-toolkit>.
Include the following information in your bug report:
o Complete command-line used to run the tool
o Tool "--version"
o MySQL version of all servers involved
o Output from the tool including STDERR
o Input files (log/dump/config files, etc.)
If possible, include debugging output by running the tool with
"PTDEBUG"; see "ENVIRONMENT".
DOWNLOADING
Visit <http://www.percona.com/software/percona-toolkit/> to download
the latest release of Percona Toolkit. Or, get the latest release from
the command line:
wget percona.com/get/percona-toolkit.tar.gz
wget percona.com/get/percona-toolkit.rpm
wget percona.com/get/percona-toolkit.deb
You can also get individual tools from the latest release:
wget percona.com/get/TOOL
Replace "TOOL" with the name of any tool.
AUTHORS
Baron Schwartz, Justin Swanhart, Fernando Ipar, Daniel Nichter, and
Brian Fraser
ABOUT PERCONA TOOLKIT
This tool is part of Percona Toolkit, a collection of advanced command-
line tools for MySQL developed by Percona. Percona Toolkit was forked
from two projects in June, 2011: Maatkit and Aspersa. Those projects
were created by Baron Schwartz and primarily developed by him and
Daniel Nichter. Visit <http://www.percona.com/software/> to learn
about other free, open-source software from Percona.
COPYRIGHT, LICENSE, AND WARRANTY
This program is copyright 2011-2015 Percona LLC and/or its affiliates,
2010-2011 Baron Schwartz.
THIS PROGRAM IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED
WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the
Free Software Foundation, version 2; OR the Perl Artistic License. On
UNIX and similar systems, you can issue `man perlgpl' or `man
perlartistic' to read these licenses.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along
with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc.,
59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA.
VERSION
pt-stalk 2.2.14
perl v5.20.2 2015-04-10 PT-STALK(1)