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RRDXPORT(1)			    rrdtool			   RRDXPORT(1)

NAME
       rrdxport	- Export data in XML format based on data from one or several
       RRD

SYNOPSIS
       rrdtool xport [-s|--start seconds] [-e|--end seconds]
       [-m|--maxrows rows] [--step value] [--json] [-t|--showtime] [--enumds]
       [--daemon|-d address] [DEF:vname=rrd:ds-name:CF]	[CDEF:vname=rpn-
       expression] [XPORT:vname[:legend]]

DESCRIPTION
       The xport function's main purpose is to write an	XML formatted
       representation of the data stored in one	or several RRDs. It can	also
       extract numerical reports.

       If no XPORT statements are found, there will be no output.

       -s|--start seconds (default end-1day)
	   The	time  when  the	 exported  range should	begin. Time in seconds
	   since epoch (1970-01-01) is required. Negative numbers are relative
	   to the current time.	By default one	day  worth  of	data  will  be
	   printed.   See also "AT-STYLE TIME SPECIFICATION" in	rrdfetch for a
	   detailed explanation	on how to specify time.

	   See "OUTPUT FORMAT" below for  details  on  how  this  affects  the
	   output.

       -e|--end	seconds	(default now)
	   The	time when the exported range should end. Time in seconds since
	   epoch.  See also "AT-STYLE TIME SPECIFICATION" in  rrdfetch	for  a
	   detailed explanation	on how to specify time.

	   See	"OUTPUT	 FORMAT"  below	 for  details  on how this affects the
	   output.

       -m|--maxrows rows (default 400 rows)
	   This	works like the -w|--width parameter of rrdgraph.  In  fact  it
	   is  exactly the same, but the parameter was renamed to describe its
	   purpose in this module. See rrdgraph	documentation for details.

       --step value (default automatic)
	   See rrdgraph	documentation.

       --daemon|-d address
	   Address of the rrdcached daemon. If specified, a "flush" command is
	   sent	to the server  before  reading	the  RRD  files.  This	allows
	   rrdtool  to	return	fresh data even	if the daemon is configured to
	   cache values	for a long time.  For a	list of	accepted formats,  see
	   the -l option in the	rrdcached manual.

	     rrdtool xport --daemon unix:/var/run/rrdcached.sock ...

       -t|--showtime
	   include the time into each data row.

       --json
	   produce json	formatted output (instead of xml)

       --enumds
	   The	generated  xml	should	contain	 the data values in enumerated
	   tags.

	    <v0>val</v0><v1>val</v1>

       DEF:vname=rrd:ds-name:CF
	   See rrdgraph	documentation.

       CDEF:vname=rpn-expression
	   See rrdgraph	documentation.

       XPORT:vname[:legend]
	   At  least  one  XPORT  statement  should  be	 present.  The	values
	   referenced by vname are printed. Optionally add a legend.

OUTPUT FORMAT
       The output is enclosed in an xport element and contains two blocks. The
       first  block is enclosed	by a meta element and contains some meta data.
       The second block	is enclosed by a data element and  contains  the  data
       rows.

       Let's assume that the xport command looks like this:

	 rrdtool xport \
		 --start now-1h	--end now \
		 DEF:xx=host-inout.lo.rrd:output:AVERAGE \
		 DEF:yy=host-inout.lo.rrd:input:AVERAGE	\
		 CDEF:aa=xx,yy,+,8,* \
		 XPORT:xx:"out bytes" \
		 XPORT:aa:"in and out bits"

       The  resulting  meta data section is (the values	will depend on the RRD
       characteristics):

	 <meta>
	   <start>1020611700</start>
	   <step>300</step>
	   <end>1020615600</end>
	   <rows>14</rows>
	   <columns>2</columns>
	   <legend>
	     <entry>out	bytes</entry>
	     <entry>in and out bits</entry>
	   </legend>
	 </meta>

       The resulting data section is:

	 <data>
	   <row><t>1020611700</t><v>3.4000000000e+00</v><v>5.4400000000e+01</v></row>
	   <row><t>1020612000</t><v>3.4000000000e+00</v><v>5.4400000000e+01</v></row>
	   <row><t>1020612300</t><v>3.4000000000e+00</v><v>5.4400000000e+01</v></row>
	   <row><t>1020612600</t><v>3.4113333333e+00</v><v>5.4581333333e+01</v></row>
	   <row><t>1020612900</t><v>3.4000000000e+00</v><v>5.4400000000e+01</v></row>
	   <row><t>1020613200</t><v>3.4000000000e+00</v><v>5.4400000000e+01</v></row>
	   <row><t>1020613500</t><v>3.4000000000e+00</v><v>5.4400000000e+01</v></row>
	   <row><t>1020613800</t><v>3.4000000000e+00</v><v>5.4400000000e+01</v></row>
	   <row><t>1020614100</t><v>3.4000000000e+00</v><v>5.4400000000e+01</v></row>
	   <row><t>1020614400</t><v>3.4000000000e+00</v><v>5.4400000000e+01</v></row>
	   <row><t>1020614700</t><v>3.7333333333e+00</v><v>5.9733333333e+01</v></row>
	   <row><t>1020615000</t><v>3.4000000000e+00</v><v>5.4400000000e+01</v></row>
	   <row><t>1020615300</t><v>3.4000000000e+00</v><v>5.4400000000e+01</v></row>
	   <row><t>1020615600</t><v>NaN</v><v>NaN</v></row>
	 </data>

       All the statistics in the output	will use  the  same  step.  The	 first
       sample will be the first	sample starting	immediately after --start. The
       last sample will	be the one ending at or	immediately after --end.

       Each  sample  has  a  timestamp	and one	or more	values.	The timestamps
       associated with a value in RRDtool ALWAYS represent the time the	sample
       was taken. Since	any value you sample will represent some sort of  past
       state  your  sampling apparatus has gathered, the timestamp will	always
       be at the end of	the sampling period.

       RRDtool does not	store the actual samples, but does internal resampling
       of the values presented to  it.	Nevertheless  when  a  data  value  is
       presented  with	a  single timestamp the	timestamp is at	the end	of the
       period the value	represents. Note that the timestamp itself is  outside
       the  period  the	 sample	is valid for. For more details about this, see
       PDP calculation explanation.

       So the time range for a	sample	with  a	 timestamp  is	actually  from
       "timestamp - step" inclusive to "timestamp" exclusive.

       The first line of the sample output:

	   <row><t>1020611700</t><v>3.4000000000e+00</v><v>5.4400000000e+01</v></row>

       therefore  means	 that  the  values  for	 the  interval	1020611400  to
       1020611699 were 3.4 and 54.4 for	"out bytes"  and  "in  and  out	 bits"
       respectively, because the value was taken at 1020611700.

EXAMPLE	1
	 rrdtool xport \
		 DEF:out=if1-inouts.rrd:outoctets:AVERAGE \
		 XPORT:out:"out	bytes"

EXAMPLE	2
	 rrdtool xport \
		 DEF:out1=if1-inouts.rrd:outoctets:AVERAGE \
		 DEF:out2=if2-inouts.rrd:outoctets:AVERAGE \
		 CDEF:sum=out1,out2,+ \
		 XPORT:out1:"if1 out bytes" \
		 XPORT:out2:"if2 out bytes" \
		 XPORT:sum:"output sum"

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

       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.

AUTHOR
       Tobias Oetiker <tobi@oetiker.ch>

1.9.0				  2024-07-29			   RRDXPORT(1)

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