| RRDTool-OO documentation | view source | Contained in the RRDTool-OO distribution. |
RRDTool::OO - Object-oriented interface to RRDTool
use RRDTool::OO;
# Constructor
my $rrd = RRDTool::OO->new(
file => "myrrdfile.rrd" );
# Create a round-robin database
$rrd->create(
step => 1, # one-second intervals
data_source => { name => "mydatasource",
type => "GAUGE" },
archive => { rows => 5 });
# Update RRD with sample values, use current time.
for(1..5) {
$rrd->update($_);
sleep(1);
}
# Start fetching values from one day back,
# but skip undefined ones first
$rrd->fetch_start();
$rrd->fetch_skip_undef();
# Fetch stored values
while(my($time, $value) = $rrd->fetch_next()) {
print "$time: ",
defined $value ? $value : "[undef]", "\n";
}
# Draw a graph in a PNG image
$rrd->graph(
image => "mygraph.png",
vertical_label => 'My Salary',
start => time() - 10,
draw => {
type => "area",
color => '0000FF',
legend => "Salary over Time",
}
);
# Same using rrdtool's graphv
$rrd->graphv(
image => "mygraph.png",
[...]
};
RRDTool::OO is an object-oriented interface to Tobi Oetiker's
round robin database tool rrdtool. It uses rrdtool's
RRDs module to get access to rrdtool's shared library.
RRDTool::OO tries to marry rrdtool's database engine with the
dwimminess and whipuptitude Perl programmers take for granted. Using
RRDTool::OO abstracts away implementation details of the RRD engine,
uses easy to memorize named parameters and sets meaningful defaults
for parameters not needed in simple cases.
For the experienced user, however, it provides full access to
rrdtool's API (if you find a feature that's not implemented, let
me know).
The constructor hooks up with an existing RRD database file $file,
but doesn't create a new one if none exists. That's what the create()
methode is for. Returns a RRDTool::OO object, which can be used to
get access to the following methods.
Creates a new round robin database (RRD). A RRD consists of one or more data sources and one or more archives:
$rrd->create(
step => 60,
data_source => { name => "mydatasource",
type => "GAUGE" },
archive => { rows => 5 });
This defines a RRD database with a step rate of 60 seconds in between
primary data points. Additionally, the RRD start time can be specified
by specifying a start parameter.
It also sets up one data source named my_data_source
of type GAUGE, telling rrdtool to use values of data samples
as-is, without additional trickery.
And it creates a single archive with a 1:1 mapping between primary data points and archive points, with a capacity to hold five data points.
The RRD's step parameter is optional, and will be set to 300 seconds
by rrdtool by default.
In addition to the mandatory settings for name and type,
data_source parameter takes the following optional parameters:
min (minimum input, defaults to U),
max (maximum input, defaults to U),
heartbeat (defaults to twice the RRD's step rate).
Archives expect at least one parameter, rows indicating the number
of data points the archive is configured to hold. If nothing else is
set, rrdtool will store primary data points 1:1 in the archive.
If you want
to combine several primary data points into one archive point, specify
values for
cpoints (the number of points to combine) and cfunc
(the consolidation function) explicitly:
$rrd->create(
step => 60,
data_source => { name => "mydatasource",
type => "GAUGE" },
archive => { rows => 5,
cpoints => 10,
cfunc => 'AVERAGE',
});
This will collect 10 data points to form one archive point, using
the calculated average, as indicated by the parameter cfunc
(Consolidation Function, CF). Other options for cfunc are
MIN, MAX, and LAST.
If you're defining multiple data sources or multiple archives, just provide them in this manner:
# Define the RRD
my $rc = $rrd->create(
step => 60,
data_source => { name => 'load1',
type => 'GAUGE',
},
data_source => { name => 'load2',
type => 'GAUGE',
},
archive => { rows => 5,
cpoints => 10,
cfunc => 'AVERAGE',
},
archive => { rows => 5,
cpoints => 10,
cfunc => 'MAX',
},
);
Update the round robin database with a new data sample, consisting of a value and an optional time stamp. If called with a single parameter, like in
$rrd->update($value);
then the current timestamp and the defined $value will be used.
If update is called with a named parameter list like in
$rrd->update(time => $time, value => $value);
then the given timestamp $time is used along with the given value
$value.
When updating multiple data sources, use the values parameter
(instead of value) and pass an arrayref:
$rrd->update(time => $time, values => [$val1, $val2, ...]);
This way, rrdtool expects you to pass in the data values in
exactly the same order as the data sources were defined in the
create method. If that's not the case,
then the values parameter also accepts a hashref, mapping data source
names to values:
$rrd->update(time => $time,
values => { $dsname1 => $val1,
$dsname2 => $val2, ...});
RRDTool::OO will transform this automagically
into RRDTool's template syntax.
This is identical to update, but uses rrdtool's updatev function internally.
The only difference is when using the print_results method described
below, which then contains additional information.
Initializes the iterator to fetch data from the RRD. This works nicely without
any parameters if
your archives are using a single consolidation function (e.g. MAX).
If there's several archives in the RRD using different consolidation
functions, you have to specify which one you want:
$rrd->fetch_start(cfunc => "MAX");
Other options for cfunc are MIN, AVERAGE, and LAST.
fetch_start features a number of optional parameters:
start, end and resolution.
If the start
time parameter is omitted, the fetch starts 24 hours before the end of the
archive. Also, an end time can be specified:
$rrd->fetch_start(start => time()-10*60,
end => time());
The third optional parameter,
resolution defaults to the highest resolution available and can
be set to a value in seconds, specifying the time interval between
the data samples extracted from the RRD.
See the rrdtool fetch manual page for details.
Development note: The current implementation
fetches all values from the RRA in one swoop
and caches them in memory. This might
change in the future, to cache only the last timestamp and keep fetching
from the RRD with every fetch_next() call.
rrdtool doesn't remember the time the first data sample went into the
archive. So if you run a rrdtool fetch with a start time of 24 hours
ago and you've only submitted a couple of samples to the archive, you'll
see many undef values.
Starting from the current iterator position (or at the specified start
time immediately after a fetch_start()), fetch_skip_undef()
will skip all undef values in the RRA and
positions the iterator right before the first defined value.
If all values in the RRA are undefined, the
a following $rrd->fetch_next() will return undef.
Gets the next row from the RRD iterator, initialized by a previous call
to $rrd->fetch_start(). Returns the time of the archive point
along with all values as a list.
Note that there might be more than one value coming back from fetch_next
if the RRA defines more than one datasource):
I<($time, @values_of_all_ds) = $rrd-E<gt>fetch_next()>
It is not possible to fetch only a specific datasource, as rrdtool doesn't provide this.
If there's only one data source in the RRD, drawing a nice graph in an image file on disk is as easy as
$rrd->graph(
image => $image_file_name,
vertical_label => 'My Salary',
draw => { thickness => 2,
color => 'FF0000',
legend => 'Salary over Time',
},
);
This will assume a start time of 24 hours before now and an
end time of now. Specify start and end explicitly to
be clear:
$rrd->graph(
image => $image_file_name,
vertical_label => 'My Salary',
start => time() - 24*3600,
end => time(),
draw => { thickness => 2,
color => 'FF0000',
legend => 'Salary over Time',
},
);
As always, RRDTool::OO will pick reasonable defaults for parameters
not specified. The values for data source and consolidation function
default to the first values it finds in the RRD.
If there are multiple datasources in the RRD or multiple archives
with different values for cfunc, just specify explicitly which
one to draw:
$rrd->graph(
image => $image_file_name,
vertical_label => 'My Salary',
draw => {
thickness => 2,
color => 'FF0000',
dsname => "load",
cfunc => 'MAX'},
);
If draw doesn't define a type, it defaults to "line". If
you don't want to define a type (because the graph shouldn't be drawn),
use type => "hidden". Other
values are "area" for solid colored areas. The "stack" type
(for graphical values stacked on top of each other)
has been deprecated sind rrdtool-1.2, but RRDTool::OO still supports it
by transforming it into an 'area' type with a 'stack' option.
And you can certainly have more than one graph in the picture:
$rrd->graph(
image => $image_file_name,
vertical_label => 'My Salary',
draw => {
type => 'area',
color => 'FF0000', # red area
dsname => "load",
cfunc => 'MAX'},
draw => {
type => 'area',
stack => 1,
color => '00FF00', # a green area stacked on top of the red one
dsname => "load",
cfunc => 'AVERAGE'},
);
Graphs may assemble data from different RRD files. Just specify
which file you want to draw the data from, using draw:
$rrd->graph(
image => $image_file_name,
vertical_label => 'Network Traffic',
draw => {
file => "file1.rrd",
legend => "First Source",
},
draw => {
file => "file2.rrd",
type => 'area',
stack => 1,
color => '00FF00', # a green area stacked on top of the red one
dsname => "load",
legend => "Second Source",
cfunc => 'AVERAGE'
},
);
If a file parameter is specified per draw, the defaults for dsname
and cfunc are fetched from this file, not from the file that's attached
to the RRDTool::OO object $rrd used.
Graphs may also consist of algebraic calculations of previously defined
graphs. In this case, graphs derived from real data sources need to be named,
so that subsequent cdef definitions can refer to them and calculate
new graphs, based on the previously defined graph:
$rrd->graph(
image => $image_file_name,
vertical_label => 'Network Traffic',
draw => {
type => 'line',
color => 'FF0000', # red line
dsname => 'load',
name => 'firstgraph',
legend => 'Unmodified Load',
},
draw => {
type => 'line',
color => '00FF00', # green line
cdef => "firstgraph,2,*",
legend => 'Load Doubled Up',
},
);
Note that the second draw doesn't refer to a datasource dsname
(nor does it fall back to the default data source), but
defines a cdef, performing calculations on a previously defined
draw named firstgraph. The calculation is specified using
RRDTool's reverse polish notation, where instructions are separated by commas
("firstgraph,2,*" simply multiplies firstgraph's values by 2).
On a global level, in addition to the vertical_label parameter shown
in the examples above, graph offers a plethora of parameters:
vertical_label,
title,
start,
end,
x_grid,
y_grid,
alt_y_grid,
no_minor,
alt_y_mrtg,
alt_autoscale,
alt_autoscale_max,
base,
units_exponent,
units_length,
width,
height,
interlaced,
imginfo,
imgformat,
overlay,
unit,
lazy,
rigid,
upper_limit,
logarithmic,
color,
no_legend,
only_graph,
force_rules_legend,
title,
step.
Some options (e.g. alt_y_grid) don't expect values, they need to
be specified like
alt_y_grid => undef
in order to be passed properly to RRDTool.
The color option expects a reference to a hash with various settings
for the different graph areas:
back (background),
canvas,
shadea (left/top border),
shadeb (right/bottom border),
grid, mgrid major grid,
font,
frame and arrow:
$rrd->graph(
...
color => { back => '#0e0e0e',
arrow => '#ff0000',
canvas => '#eebbbb',
},
...
);
Fonts for various graph elements may be specified in font blocks,
which must either name a TrueType font file or a PDF/Postscript font name.
You may optionally specify a size and element name (defaults to DEFAULT,
which to RRD means "use this font for everything). Example:
font => {
name => "/usr/openwin/lib/X11/fonts/TrueType/GillSans.ttf",
size => 16,
element => "title"
}
Please check the RRDTool documentation for a detailed description on what each option is used for:
http://people.ee.ethz.ch/~oetiker/webtools/rrdtool/manual/rrdgraph.html
Sometimes it's useful to print max, min or average values of
a given graph at the bottom of the chart or to STDOUT. That's what
gprint and print options are for. They are printing variables
which are defined as vdefs somewhere else:
$rrd->graph(
image => $image_file_name,
# Real graph
draw => {
name => "first_draw",
dsname => "load",
cfunc => 'MAX'
},
# vdef for calculating average of real graph
draw => {
type => "hidden",
name => "average_of_first_draw",
vdef => "first_draw,AVERAGE"
},
gprint => {
draw => 'average_of_first_draw',
format => 'Average=%lf',
},
);
The vdef performs a calculation, specified in RPN notation, on
a real graph, which it refers to. It uses a hidden graph for this.
The gprint option then refers to the vdef virtual graph and prints
"Average=x.xx" at the bottom of the graph, showing what the
average value of graph first_draw is.
To write comments to the graph (like gprints, but with no associated
RRD data source) use comment, like this:
$rrd->graph(
image => $image_file_name,
draw => {
name => "first_draw",
dsname => "load",
cfunc => 'MAX'},
comment => "Remember, 83% of all statistics are made up",
);
Multiple comment lines can be specified in a single comment specification like this:
comment => [ "All the king's horses and all the king's men\\n",
"couldn't put Humpty together again.\\n",
],
Vertical rules (lines) may be placed into the graph by using a vrule
block like so:
vrule => { time => time()-3600, }
These can be useful for indicating when the most recent day on the graph started, for example.
vrules can have a color specification (they default to black) and also an optional legend string specified:
vrule => { time => $first_thing_today,
color => "#0000ff",
legend => "When we crossed midnight"
},
hrules can have a color specification (they default to black) and also an optional legend string specified:
hrule => { value => $numeric_value,
color => "#0000ff",
legend => "a static line at your value"
},
Horizontal rules can be added by using a line block
like in
line => {
value => "fixed num value or draw name",
color => "#0000ff",
legend => "a blue horizontal line",
width => 120,
stack => 1,
}
If instead of a horizontal line, a rectangular area is supposed to
be added to the graph, use an area block:
area => {
value => "fixed num value or draw name",
color => "#0000ff",
legend => "a blue horizontal line",
stack => 1,
}
The graph method can also generate tickmarks (vertical lines)
for every defined value, using the tick option:
tick => {
draw => "drawname",
color => "#0000ff",
legend => "a blue horizontal line",
stack => 1,
}
The graph may be shifted relative to the time axis:
shift => {
draw => "drawname",
offset => $offset,
}
This is identical to graph, but uses rrdtool's graphv function internally.
The only difference is when using the print_results method described below, which
then contains additional information.
Be aware that rrdtool 1.3 is required for graphv to work.
Available as of rrdtool 1.0.49.
Dumps the RRD in XML format to STDOUT. If you want to dump it into a file instead, do this:
my $pid;
unless ($pid = open DUMP, "-|") {
die "Can't fork: $!" unless defined $pid;
$rrd->dump();
exit 0;
}
waitpid($pid, 0);
open OUT, ">out";
print OUT $_ for <DUMP>;
close OUT;
Grabs the RRD's meta data and returns it as a hashref, holding a map of parameter names and their values.
Return the RRD's last update time.
Available as of rrdtool 1.0.49.
Restore a RRD from a dump. The xml parameter specifies the name
of the XML file containing the dump. If the optional flag range_check
is set to a true value, restore will make sure the values in the
RRAs do not exceed the limits defined for the different datasources:
$rrd->restore(xml => "file.xml", range_check => 1);
Alter a RRD's data source configuration values:
# Set the heartbeat of the RRD's only datasource to 100
$rrd->tune(heartbeat => 100);
# Set the minimum of DS 'load' to 1
$rrd->tune(dsname => 'load', minimum => 1);
# Set the maximum of DS 'load' to 10
$rrd->tune(dsname => 'load', maximum => 10);
# Set the type of DS 'load' to AVERAGE
$rrd->tune(dsname => 'load', type => 'AVERAGE');
# Set the name of DS 'load' to 'load2'
$rrd->tune(dsname => 'load', name => 'load2');
Return the message of the last error that occurred while interacting
with RRDTool::OO.
RRDTool supports aberrant behavior detection (ABD), which takes a data source, stuffs its values into a special RRA, smoothes the data stream, tries to predict future values and triggers an alert if actual values are way off the predicted values.
Using a fairly elaborate algorithm not only allows it to find out if a data source produces a value that exceeds a certain fixed threshold. The algorithm constantly adapts its parameters to the input data and acts dynamically on slowly changing values.
The alpha parameter specifies the baseline and
lies between 0 and 1. Values close to 1 specify
that most recent values have the most weight on the prediction, whereas
values close to 0 indicate that past values carry higher weight.
On top of that, ABD can deal with data input that displays continuously
rising values (slope). The beta parameters, again between 0 and 1,
specifies whether past values or more recent values carry the most
weight.
And, furthermore, it deals with seasonal cycles, so it won't freak out if
there's a daily peak at noon. The gamma parameter indicates this, if
you don't specify it, it defaults to the value of alpha.
In the easiest case, an RRA with aberrant behavior detection can be created like
# Create a round-robin database
$rrd->create(
step => 1, # one-second intervals
data_source => { name => "mydatasource",
type => "GAUGE" },
hwpredict => { rows => 3600,
},
);
where alpha and beta default to 0.5, and the seasonal_period
defaults to 1/5 of the rows number.
rows is the number of primary data points that are stored in the RRA
before a wrap-around happens. Note that with ABD enabled, RRDTool won't
consolidate the data from a data source before stuffing it into
the HWPREDICT RRAs, as the whole point of ABD is to smooth unfiltered
data and predict future values.
A violation happen if a new measured value falls outside of the
prediction. If threshold or more violations happen within
window_length, an error is reported to the FAILURES RRA.
threshold defaults to 7, window_length to 9.
A more elaborate RRD could be defined as
# Create a round-robin database
$rrd->create(
step => 1, # one-second intervals
data_source => { name => "mydatasource",
type => "GAUGE" },
hwpredict => { rows => 3600,
alpha => 0.1,
beta => 0.1,
gamma => 0.1,
threshold => 7,
window_length => 9,
},
);
If you want to peek under the hood (not that you need to, just for your entertainment), with the specification above, RRDTool::OO will create the following five RRAs according to the RRDtool specification and fill in these values:
* RRA:HWPREDICT:rows:alpha:beta:seasonal_period:rra-num
* RRA:SEASONAL:seasonal period:gamma:rra-num
* RRA:DEVSEASONAL:seasonal period:gamma:rra-num
* RRA:DEVPREDICT:rows:rra-num
* RRA:FAILURES:rows:threshold:window_length:rra-num
The rra-num argument is an internal index referencing other
RRAs (for example, HWPREDICT references SEASONAL), but this will
be taken care of automatically by RRDTool::OO with no user
interaction required whatsoever.
The following methods are not yet implemented:
rrdresize, xport, rrdcgi.
The graph method can be configured to have RRDTool's graph
function to print data. Calling rrdtool on the command line, this
data ends up on STDOUT, but calling something like
$rrd->graph(
image => "mygraph.png",
start => $start_time,
# ...
draw => {
type => "hidden",
name => "in95precent",
vdef => "firstdraw,95,PERCENT"
},
print => {
draw => 'in95percent',
format => "95 Percent Result = %3.2lf",
},
# ...
captures the print data internally. To get access to a reference to the array containing the different pieces of data written in this way, call
my $array_ref = $rrd->print_results();
If no print output is available, the array referenced by $array_ref
is empty.
If the graphv function is used instead of graph, the return value of
print_results is a hashref containing the same information in the print keys,
along with additional keys containing detailed information on the graph. See rrdtool
documentation for more detail. Here is an example:
use Data::Dumper;
$rrd -> graphv (
image => "-",
start => $start_time,
# ...
my $hash_ref = $rrd->print_results();
print Dumper $hash_ref;
$VAR1 = {
'print[2]' => '1600.00',
'value_min' => '200',
'image_height' => 64,
'graph_height' => 10,
'print[1]' => '3010.18',
'graph_end' => 1249391462,
'print[3]' => '1600.00',
'graph_left' => 51,
'print[4]' => '2337.29',
'print[0]' => '305.13',
'value_max' => '10000',
'graph_width' => 10,
'image_width' => 91,
'graph_top' => 22,
'image' => '#PNG
[...lots of binary rubbish your terminal won't like...]
',
'graph_start' => 1217855462
};
In this case, the option (image => "-") has been used to create the hash key
with the same name, the value of which actually contains the BLOB of the image itself.
This is useful when image needs to be passed to other modules (e.g. Image::Magick),
instead of writing it to disk.
Be aware that rrdtool 1.3 is required for graphv to work.
By default, RRDTool::OO's methods will throw fatal errors (as in:
they're calling die) if the underlying RRDs::* commands indicate
failure.
This behaviour can be overridden by calling the constructor with
the raise_error flag set to false:
my $rrd = RRDTool::OO->new(
file => "myrrdfile.rrd",
raise_error => 0,
);
In this mode, RRDTool's methods will just pass back values returned
from the underlying RRDs functions if an error happens (usually
1 if successful and undef if an error occurs).
RRDTool::OO is Log::Log4perl enabled, so if you want to know
what's going on under the hood, just turn it on:
use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy);
Log::Log4perl->easy_init({
level => $DEBUG
});
If you're interested particularly in rrdtool commands issued
by RRDTool::OO while you're operating it, just enable the
category "rrdtool":
Log::Log4perl->easy_init({
level => $INFO,
category => 'rrdtool',
layout => '%m%n',
});
This will display all rrdtool commands that RRDTool::OO submits
to the shared library. Let's turn it on for the code snippet in the
SYNOPSIS section of this manual page and watch the output:
rrdtool create myrrdfile.rrd --step 1 \
DS:mydatasource:GAUGE:2:U:U RRA:MAX:0.5:1:5
rrdtool update myrrdfile.rrd N:1
rrdtool update myrrdfile.rrd N:2
rrdtool update myrrdfile.rrd N:3
rrdtool fetch myrrdfile.rrd MAX
Often handy for cut-and-paste.
RRDTool::OO tracks rrdtool's progress loosely, so it might happen
that at a given point in time, rrdtool introduces a new option that
RRDTool::OO doesn't know about yet.
This might lead to problems, since default, RRDTool::OO has its
strict mode enabled, rejecting all unknown options. This mode is
usually helpful, because it catches typos (like "verical_label"),
but if you want to use a new rrdtool option, it's in the way.
To work around this problem until a new version of RRDTool::OO
supports the new parameter, you can use
$rrd->option_add("graph", "frobnication_level");
to add it to the optional parameter list of the graph (or whatever)
rrd function. Note that some functions in RRDTool::OO have
sub-methods, which you can specify with the dash notation.
The graph method with its various "graph/draw", "graph/color",
"graph/font" are notable examples.
And, as a band-aid, you can disable strict mode in these situation
by setting the strict parameter to 0 in RRDTool::OO's
constructor call:
my $rrd = RRDTool::OO->new(
strict => 0,
file => "myrrdfile.rrd",
);
Note that RRDTool::OO follows the convention that parameters
names do not contain dashes, but underscores instead. So, you need
to say "vertical_label", not "vertical-label". The underlying
rrdtool layer, however, expects dashes, not underscores, which is why
RRDTool::OO converts them automatically, e.g. transforming
"vertical_label" to "--vertical-label" before the
underlying rrdtool call happens.
If you want to use RRDTool::OO to create RRD commands without
executing them directly, thanks to Jacquelin Charbonnel, there's the
dry run mode. Here's how it works:
my $rrd = RRDTool::OO->new(
file => "myrrdfile.rrd",
dry_run => 1
);
With dry_run set to a true value, you can run commands like
$rrd->create(
step => 60,
data_source => { name => "mydatasource",
type => "GAUGE" },
archive => { rows => 5 });
but since dry_mode is on, they won't be handed through to the rrdtool layer anymore. Instead, RRDTool::OO allows you to retrieve a reference to the RRDs function it was about to call including its arguments:
my ($subref, $args) = $rrd->get_exec_env();
You can now examine or modify the subroutine reference $subref or
the arguments in the array reference $args. Later, simply call
$subref->(@$args);
to execute the RRDs function with the modified argument list later. In this case, @$args would contain the following items:
("myrrdfile.rrd", "--step", "60",
"DS:mydatasource:GAUGE:120:U:U", "RRA:MAX:0.5:1:5")
If you're interested in the RRD function name to be executed, retrieve
the third parameter of get_exec_env:
my ($subref, $args, $funcname) = $rrd->get_exec_env();
RRDTool::OO requires a rrdtool installation with the
RRDs Perl module, that comes with the rrdtool distribution.
Download the tarball from
http://oss.oetiker.ch/rrdtool/pub/rrdtool.tar.gz
and then unpack, compile and install:
tar zxfv rrdtool.tar.gz
cd rrdtool-1.2.26
./configure --enable-perl-site-install --prefix=/usr \
--disable-tcl --disable-rrdcgi
make
make install
cd bindings/perl-shared
perl Makefile.PL
./configure
make
make test
make install
http://rrdtool.org
http://people.ee.ethz.ch/~oetiker/webtools/rrdtool/manual/index.html
(English)
http://www.linux-magazine.com/issue/44/Perl_RDDtool.pdf
(German)
http://www.linux-magazin.de/Artikel/ausgabe/2004/06/perl/perl.html
Mike Schilli, <m@perlmeister.com>
Copyright (C) 2004-2009 by Mike Schilli
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.8.3 or, at your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available.
| RRDTool-OO documentation | view source | Contained in the RRDTool-OO distribution. |