diff --git a/doc/rrdcreate.1 b/doc/rrdcreate.1
index 501076229000429631893465defb0ec60613d6ff..94ac5fc0e3b81dda43576d25893bc0ca49602a01 100644 (file)
--- a/doc/rrdcreate.1
+++ b/doc/rrdcreate.1
-.\" Automatically generated by Pod::Man v1.37, Pod::Parser v1.14
+.\" Automatically generated by Pod::Man 2.22 (Pod::Simple 3.07)
.\"
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.\" ========================================================================
-.de Sh \" Subsection heading
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+.\" therefore won't be available. \*(C` and \*(C' expand to `' in nroff,
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+.\"
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-.\" titles (.TH), headers (.SH), subsections (.Sh), items (.Ip), and index
+.\" titles (.TH), headers (.SH), subsections (.SS), items (.Ip), and index
.\" entries marked with X<> in POD. Of course, you'll have to process the
.\" output yourself in some meaningful fashion.
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.IX Title "RRDCREATE 1"
-.TH RRDCREATE 1 "2008-06-11" "1.3.99909060808" "rrdtool"
+.TH RRDCREATE 1 "2011-01-06" "1.4.7" "rrdtool"
+.\" For nroff, turn off justification. Always turn off hyphenation; it makes
+.\" way too many mistakes in technical documents.
+.if n .ad l
+.nh
.SH "NAME"
rrdcreate \- Set up a new Round Robin Database
.SH "SYNOPSIS"
\&\fBrrdtool\fR \fBcreate\fR \fIfilename\fR
[\fB\-\-start\fR|\fB\-b\fR\ \fIstart\ time\fR]
[\fB\-\-step\fR|\fB\-s\fR\ \fIstep\fR]
+[\fB\-\-no\-overwrite\fR]
[\fB\s-1DS:\s0\fR\fIds-name\fR\fB:\fR\fI\s-1DST\s0\fR\fB:\fR\fIdst\ arguments\fR]
[\fB\s-1RRA:\s0\fR\fI\s-1CF\s0\fR\fB:\fR\fIcf\ arguments\fR]
.SH "DESCRIPTION"
The create function of RRDtool lets you set up new Round Robin
Database (\fB\s-1RRD\s0\fR) files. The file is created at its final, full size
and filled with \fI*UNKNOWN*\fR data.
-.Sh "\fIfilename\fP"
+.SS "\fIfilename\fP"
.IX Subsection "filename"
The name of the \fB\s-1RRD\s0\fR you want to create. \fB\s-1RRD\s0\fR files should end
with the extension \fI.rrd\fR. However, \fBRRDtool\fR will accept any
filename.
-.Sh "\fB\-\-start\fP|\fB\-b\fP \fIstart time\fP (default: now \- 10s)"
+.SS "\fB\-\-start\fP|\fB\-b\fP \fIstart time\fP (default: now \- 10s)"
.IX Subsection "--start|-b start time (default: now - 10s)"
Specifies the time in seconds since 1970\-01\-01 \s-1UTC\s0 when the first
value should be added to the \fB\s-1RRD\s0\fR. \fBRRDtool\fR will not accept
.PP
See also AT-STYLE \s-1TIME\s0 \s-1SPECIFICATION\s0 section in the
\&\fIrrdfetch\fR documentation for other ways to specify time.
-.Sh "\fB\-\-step\fP|\fB\-s\fP \fIstep\fP (default: 300 seconds)"
+.SS "\fB\-\-step\fP|\fB\-s\fP \fIstep\fP (default: 300 seconds)"
.IX Subsection "--step|-s step (default: 300 seconds)"
Specifies the base interval in seconds with which data will be fed
into the \fB\s-1RRD\s0\fR.
-.Sh "\fB\s-1DS:\s0\fP\fIds-name\fP\fB:\fP\fI\s-1DST\s0\fP\fB:\fP\fIdst arguments\fP"
+.SS "\fB\-\-no\-overwrite\fP"
+.IX Subsection "--no-overwrite"
+Do not clobber an existing file of the same name.
+.SS "\fB\s-1DS:\s0\fP\fIds-name\fP\fB:\fP\fI\s-1DST\s0\fP\fB:\fP\fIdst arguments\fP"
.IX Subsection "DS:ds-name:DST:dst arguments"
A single \fB\s-1RRD\s0\fR can accept input from several data sources (\fB\s-1DS\s0\fR),
for example incoming and outgoing traffic on a specific communication
data source is assumed to be \fI*UNKNOWN*\fR.
.PP
\&\fImin\fR and \fImax\fR define the expected range values for data supplied by a
-data source. If \fImin\fR and/or \fImax\fR any value outside the defined range
+data source. If \fImin\fR and/or \fImax\fR are specified any value outside the defined range
will be regarded as \fI*UNKNOWN*\fR. If you do not know or care about min and
max, set them to U for unknown. Note that min and max always refer to the
processed values of the \s-1DS\s0. For a traffic\-\fB\s-1COUNTER\s0\fR type \s-1DS\s0 this would be
names of data source listed previously in the create command. This is
similar to the restriction that \fB\s-1CDEF\s0\fRs must refer only to \fB\s-1DEF\s0\fRs
and \fB\s-1CDEF\s0\fRs previously defined in the same graph command.
-.Sh "\fB\s-1RRA:\s0\fP\fI\s-1CF\s0\fP\fB:\fP\fIcf arguments\fP"
+.SS "\fB\s-1RRA:\s0\fP\fI\s-1CF\s0\fP\fB:\fP\fIcf arguments\fP"
.IX Subsection "RRA:CF:cf arguments"
The purpose of an \fB\s-1RRD\s0\fR is to store data in the round robin archives
(\fB\s-1RRA\s0\fR). An archive consists of a number of data values or statistics for
The data is also processed with the consolidation function (\fI\s-1CF\s0\fR) of
the archive. There are several consolidation functions that
consolidate primary data points via an aggregate function: \fB\s-1AVERAGE\s0\fR,
-\&\fB\s-1MIN\s0\fR, \fB\s-1MAX\s0\fR, \fB\s-1LAST\s0\fR.
+\&\fB\s-1MIN\s0\fR, \fB\s-1MAX\s0\fR, \fB\s-1LAST\s0\fR.
.IP "\s-1AVERAGE\s0" 4
.IX Item "AVERAGE"
the average of the data points is stored.
@@ -481,7 +484,7 @@ an average rate for that \s-1PDP\s0. If the total \*(L"unknown\*(R" time account
more than \fBhalf\fR the \*(L"step\*(R", the entire \s-1PDP\s0 is marked
as \*(L"unknown\*(R". This means that a mixture of known and \*(L"unknown\*(R" sample
times in a single \s-1PDP\s0 \*(L"step\*(R" may or may not add up to enough \*(L"known\*(R"
-time to warrent for a known \s-1PDP\s0.
+time to warrant a known \s-1PDP\s0.
.PP
The \*(L"heartbeat\*(R" can be short (unusual) or long (typical) relative to
the \*(L"step\*(R" interval between PDPs. A short \*(L"heartbeat\*(R" means you
@@ -493,10 +496,10 @@ sample. An extreme example of this might be a \*(L"step\*(R" of 5 minutes and a
result in all the PDPs for that entire day period being set to the
same average rate. \fI\-\- Don Baarda <don.baarda@baesystems.com>\fR
.PP
-.Vb 35
+.Vb 10
\& time|
\& axis|
-\& begin__|00|
+\& begin_\|_|00|
\& |01|
\& u|02|\-\-\-\-* sample1, restart "hb"\-timer
\& u|03| /
\& |25| /
\& |26| /
\& |27|\-\-\-\-* sample7, restart "hb"
-\& step2__|28| /
+\& step2_\|_|28| /
\& |22| /
\& |23|\-\-\-\-* sample8, restart "hb", create "pdp" for step1, create "cdp"
\& |24| /
.IP "Mail Messages" 4
.IX Item "Mail Messages"
Assume you have a method to count the number of messages transported by
-your mailserver in a certain amount of time, giving you data like '5
+your mail server in a certain amount of time, giving you data like '5
messages in the last 65 seconds'. If you look at the count of 5 like an
\&\fB\s-1ABSOLUTE\s0\fR data type you can simply update the \s-1RRD\s0 with the number 5 and the
end time of your monitoring period. RRDtool will then record the number of
absolute amounts as for example \*(L"total bytes\*(R" sent and received in a
router. What you probably want is plot rates that you can scale to
bytes/hour, for example, or plot absolute amounts with another tool
-that draws bar\-plots, where the delta-time is clear on the plot for
+that draws bar-plots, where the delta-time is clear on the plot for
each point (such that when you read the graph you see for example \s-1GB\s0
on the y axis, days on the x axis and one bar for each day).
.SH "EXAMPLE"