Data sources serve an important role in Cacti data sources are data points collected from the devices you monitor in Cacti.
Data sources take the data that has been collected by the poller.
The Data source then holds the value to be presented to the graph.
The Data source template is then associated with a graph template.
These data sources can be for example incoming traffic on an interface. Cacti allows you to create data source templates to associate to data queries the template allows you to describe what type of data Cacti should expect.
To create a Data source you will need to select the proper data input there are several options but the most popular ones would be GET SNMP data or GET SNMP data (indexed.)
You would use Get SNMP data (indexed) for interfaces for example as Cacti would need to query the device to find the interface index. You would use Get SNMP data and put in a single OID for an OID that won't change for example CPU usage generally does not have an index and the OID won't change
You will also need to tell the template what the data source type is. The most common ones being Gauge and Counter. These data types come from the RRDtool its self. Below are the supported data types and their uses. For more information see RRD Tool Create Function
GUAGE is for things like temperatures or number of people in a room or the value of a RedHat share.
COUNTER is for continuous incrementing counters like the ifInOctets counter in a router. The COUNTER data source assumes that the counter never decreases, except when a counter overflows. The update function takes the overflow into account.
The counter is stored as a per-second rate. When the counter overflows, RRDtool checks if the overflow happened at the 32bit or 64bit border and acts accordingly by adding an appropriate value to the result.
DCOUNTER the same as COUNTER, but for quantities expressed as double-precision floating point number. It could be used to track quantities that increment by non-integer numbers, i.e. number of seconds that some routine has taken to run, total weight processed by some technology equipment etc.
The only substantial difference is that DCOUNTER can either be upward counting or downward counting, but not both at the same time. The current direction is detected automatically on the second non-undefined counter update and any further change in the direction is considered a reset. The new direction is determined and locked in by the second update after reset and its difference to the value at reset.
DERIVE will store the derivative of the line going from the last to the current value of the data source. This can be useful for gauges, for example, to measure the rate of people entering or leaving a room. Internally, derive works exactly like COUNTER but without overflow checks. So if your counter does not reset at 32 or 64 bit you might want to use DERIVE and combine it with a MIN value of 0.
DDERIVE the same as DERIVE, but for quantities expressed as double-precision floating point number.
NOTE: on COUNTER vs DERIVE
by Don Baarda don.baarda@baesystems.com
If you cannot tolerate ever mistaking the occasional counter reset for a legitimate counter wrap, and would prefer "Unknowns" for all legitimate counter wraps and resets, always use DERIVE with min=0. Otherwise, using COUNTER with a suitable max will return correct values for all legitimate counter wraps, mark some counter resets as "Unknown", but can mistake some counter resets for a legitimate counter wrap.
For a 5 minute step and 32-bit counter, the probability of mistaking a counter resetfor a legitimate wrap is arguably about 0.8% per 1Mbps of maximum bandwidth. Note that this equates to 80% for 100Mbps interfaces, so for high bandwidth interfaces and a 32bit counter, DERIVE with min=0 is probably preferable. If you are using a 64bit counter, just about any max setting will eliminate the possibility of mistaking a reset for a counter wrap.
ABSOLUTE is for counters which get reset upon reading. This is used for fast counters which tend to overflow. So instead of reading them normally you reset them after every read to make sure you have a maximum time available before the next overflow. Another usage is for things you count like number of messages since the last update.
COMPUTE is for storing the result of a formula applied to other data sources in the RRD. This data source is not supplied a value on update, but rather its Primary Data Points (PDPs) are computed from the PDPs of the data sources according to the rpn-expression that defines the formula. Consolidation functions are then applied normally to the PDPs of the COMPUTE data source (that is the rpn-expression is only applied to generate PDPs). In database software, such data sets are referred to as "virtual" or "computed" columns.
You are also able to use Variables to set the name for the data source. The available Variables can be seen on the Variables documentation page.
What is also an important setting is the internal data source name. This will be used to asociate the Data source with the Graph template. so be sure to name is something that is recognizable.
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