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RRDUPDATE(1)			    rrdtool			  RRDUPDATE(1)

NAME
       rrdupdate - Store a new set of values into the RRD

SYNOPSIS
       rrdtool {update | updatev} filename [--template|-t ds-name[:ds-
       name]...]  [--skip-past-updates|-s] [--daemon|-d	address] [--]
       N:value[:value]...  timestamp:value[:value]...  at-
       timestamp@value[:value]...

DESCRIPTION
       The update function feeds new data values into an RRD. The data is time
       aligned (interpolated) according	to the properties of the RRD to	which
       the data	is written.

       updatev This  alternate	version	of update takes	the same arguments and
	       performs	the same function. The v  stands  for  verbose,	 which
	       describes  the  output  returned. updatev returns a list	of any
	       and all consolidated data points	(CDPs) written to  disk	 as  a
	       result  of  the invocation of update. The values	are indexed by
	       timestamp (time_t), RRA (consolidation function	and  PDPs  per
	       CDP),  and  data	 source	 (name).   Note	 that depending	on the
	       arguments of the	current	and previous call to update, the  list
	       may have	no entries or a	large number of	entries.

	       Since  updatev requires direct disk access, the --daemon	option
	       cannot be used with this	command.

       filename
	       The name	of the RRD you want to update.

       --locking|-L try|block|none
	       Lock the	RRD file in the	given mode: try	fails, when  the  file
	       is  locked  by  another	process, block waits until the lock is
	       released	and none skips locking at all.	The  default  is  read
	       from  the  $RRD_LOCKING	environment variable and falls back to
	       try when	such a variable	does not exist.

       --template|-t ds-name[:ds-name]...
	       By default, the update function expects its data	input  in  the
	       order  the  data	 sources are defined in	the RRD, excluding any
	       COMPUTE data sources (i.e. if the  third	 data  source  DST  is
	       COMPUTE,	 the  third  input  value will be mapped to the	fourth
	       data source in the RRD and so  on).  This  is  not  very	 error
	       resistant, as you might be sending the wrong data into an RRD.

	       The  template  switch  allows you to specify which data sources
	       you are going to	update and in which order. If the data sources
	       specified in the	template are not available in  the  RRD	 file,
	       the update process will abort with an error message.

	       While  it  appears  possible with the template switch to	update
	       data sources asynchronously, RRDtool  implicitly	 assigns  non-
	       COMPUTE	data  sources  missing from the	template the *UNKNOWN*
	       value.

	       Do not specify  a  value	 for  a	 COMPUTE  DST  in  the	update
	       function.  If  this  is done accidentally (and this can only be
	       done using the template switch),	RRDtool	will ignore the	 value
	       specified for the COMPUTE DST.

	       The  caching  daemon  rrdcached	cannot	be  used together with
	       templates yet.

       --skip-past-updates|-s
	       When updating an	rrd file with data  earlier  than  the	latest
	       update already applied, rrdtool will issue an error message and
	       abort.  This  option  instructs	rrdtool	 to silently skip such
	       data. It	can be useful when re-playing old  data	 into  an  rrd
	       file  and  you  are not sure how	many updates have already been
	       applied.

       --daemon|-d address
	       If given, RRDtool will try to connect  to  the  caching	daemon
	       rrdcached   at  address.	 If  the  connection  is  successfully
	       established the values will be sent to the  daemon  instead  of
	       accessing  the  files  directly.	 If  the  connection cannot be
	       established it will fall	back  to  direct  file-access.	 While
	       this  is	 convenient, it	can silently create problems so	please
	       read the	warning	in the examples.

	       For a list of accepted  formats,	 see  the  -l  option  in  the
	       rrdcached manual.

       {N | timestamp}:value[:value]...
	       The  data  used	for updating the RRD was acquired at a certain
	       time.  This  time  can  either  be  defined  in	seconds	 since
	       1970-01-01 or by	using the letter 'N', in which case the	update
	       time  is	 set  to be the	current	time. Negative time values are
	       subtracted  from	  the	current	  time.	  An   AT_STYLE	  TIME
	       SPECIFICATION (see the rrdfetch documentation) may also be used
	       by  delimiting  the  end	of the time specification with the '@'
	       character instead of a ':'. Getting the	timing	right  to  the
	       second  is especially important when you	are working with data-
	       sources of type COUNTER,	DERIVE,	DCOUNTER, DDERIVE or ABSOLUTE.

	       When using negative time	values,	options	and data  have	to  be
	       separated  by  two  dashes  (--),  else the time	value would be
	       parsed as an option.  See below for an example.

	       The remaining elements of the  argument	are  DS	 updates.  The
	       order  of  this	list is	the same as the	order the data sources
	       were defined in the RRA.	If there is  no	 data  for  a  certain
	       data-source, the	letter U (e.g.,	N:0.1:U:1) can be specified.

	       The  format  of	the  value  acquired  from  the	data source is
	       dependent on the	data source type chosen. Normally it  will  be
	       numeric,	but the	data acquisition modules may impose their very
	       own  parsing of this parameter as long as the colon (:) remains
	       the data	source value separator.

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
       The following environment variables may be used to change the  behavior
       of "rrdtool update":

       RRDCACHED_ADDRESS
	   If this environment variable	is set it will have the	same effect as
	   specifying  the  "--daemon" option on the command line. If both are
	   present, the	command	line argument takes precedence.

       RRDCACHED_STRIPPATH
	   If this environment variable	is  set	 it  will  strip  the  leading
	   string   from  the  filename	 prior	to  sending  the  filename  to
	   rrdcached.  This is mostly intended to allow	rrdcached to work with
	   xymon and cacti tools without having	to modify those	tools.

       RRD_LOCKING
	   If this environment variable	is set,	the RRD	file is	locked in  the
	   given  mode:	try fails, when	the file is locked by another process,
	   block waits until the lock is released and none  skips  locking  at
	   all.

	   This	 variable  can	be  overridden	by  the	--locking command line
	   option.

EXAMPLES
          "rrdtool update demo1.rrd N:3.44:3.15:U:23"

	   Update the database file demo1.rrd with 3 known and	one  *UNKNOWN*
	   value. Use the current time as the update time.

          "rrdtool update demo2.rrd 887457267:U 887457521:22 887457903:2.7"

	   Update the database file demo2.rrd which expects data from a	single
	   data-source,	 three	times. First with an *UNKNOWN* value then with
	   two regular readings. The update interval seems to  be  around  300
	   seconds.

          "rrdtool update demo3.rrd --	-5:21 N:42"

	   Update the database file demo3.rrd two times, using five seconds in
	   the past and	the current time as the	update times.

          "rrdtool update --daemon unix:/tmp/rrdd.sock	demo4.rrd N:23"

	   Use	the UNIX domain	socket "/tmp/rrdd.sock"	to contact the caching
	   daemon. If the caching daemon is not	 available,  update  the  file
	   "demo4.rrd" directly.  WARNING: Since a relative path is specified,
	   the	following  disturbing  effect  may  occur:  If	the  daemon is
	   available, the file relative	to the working directory of the	daemon
	   is used. If the daemon is not available, the	file relative  to  the
	   current  working  directory	of the invoking	process	is used.  This
	   may update two different files  depending  on  whether  the	daemon
	   could be reached or not. Don't do relative paths, kids!

AUTHORS
       Tobias	    Oetiker	  <tobi@oetiker.ch>,	  Florian      Forster
       <octo at	verplant.org>

1.9.0				  2024-07-29			  RRDUPDATE(1)

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