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Xymon WinPSclient performance

list Sebastian Auriol
Wed, 30 Jan 2019 10:57:03 +0000
Message-Id: <CAOGA450L4wo27xG3hDUsM_3E7FgVsM=user-1bea14af7182@xymon.invalid>

Zak,

I forgot to mention:
regex may not cut it for the filename issue - it's placeholders for parts
of the date that would be useful here, where that placeholder is
substituted with that part of the date, e.g. in Python:
%d -- Day of the month as a zero-padded decimal number - ref:
http://strftime.org/
In .NET (PowerShell):
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/standard/base-types/custom-date-and-time-format-strings
We just need a way of specifying the date format we want to use and it
could be interpreted by the

ToString

method of the date and time instance that holds the current datetime.

So, to add to what I had in my original post, in client-local.cfg:
Instead of:
log:C:\Temp\myServerLog*.log:10240
If we could to this, it would mean we process a small fraction of the
number of files:
log:C:\Temp\myServerLog&DD-&MM-&YY.*.log:10240
This would be interpreted at the client side as (when the date is
2019-01-30):
C:\Temp\myServerLog30-01-19.*.log
Which would find and process, e.g. C:\Temp\myServerLog30-01-19.0.log and
C:\Temp\myServerLog30-01-19.1.log

Kind regards,

SebA


On Tue, 29 Jan 2019 at 15:28, SebA <user-4631430d620a@xymon.invalid> wrote:
Hi Zak,

Thanks, yes, haha, I did notice the irony myself and was going to point it
out, or change my first paragraph to put the emphasis on reducing CPU time
spent, but I forgot!  I noticed that powershell (on some versions of the
PSclient) was using more CPU time than the process the server exists to
run, which is clearly not a good situation.

So if I select UTF-8, it's not going to double the size of the messages
sent to the Xymon server?  I'll give it a go and see what happens.

I think being able to configure the scan interval for CPUs would be good.

The latest version of PSclient was not even completing one cycle before I
was giving up and killing it, but I'll try UTF-8 and/or another server.

Kind regards,

SebA


On Tue, 29 Jan 2019 at 11:59, Beck, Zak <user-aada0fa38bf8@xymon.invalid> wrote:
Hi


Yes, there is no option for no encoding – I think the closest option to
this is actually UTF-8 because it does not attempt to adjust the message
body (remove diacritics and 0xa0 spaces) before sending. That’s what is
happening between your two log messages. Personally I don’t see that
behaviour albeit with a 10x smaller data packet (I checked on several
servers):


2019-01-29 11:43:06  Using ASCII encoding

2019-01-29 11:43:06  Connecting to host x.x.x.x

2019-01-29 11:43:06  Sent 100537 bytes to server


We can add a third option to do no encoding I guess.


Detecting CPUs is entirely down to this WMI call: Get-WmiObject -Class
Win32_Processor. Yes, it does take time. I have tried over the years to
reduce the amount of WMI calls (I think we’re down to 4) because they do
seem to take a lot of time and on occasion are unreliable. Unfortunately I
have not been able to find an alternative to this call. And I have 1000 VMs
which can have CPUs hot added without reboot, so there is use case for
checking every time. The result of the WMI call is already cached so we
could amend the script to optionally run only on slow scans (every 6 hours
by default).


It may be simpler to add regex processing for your filename issue, I can
take a look.


I had to chuckle, I hope you appreciate the irony of saying we’re
suffering from feature bloat and then requesting more enhancements /
features 😉


Zak


*From:* Xymon <xymon-bounces at xymon.com> *On Behalf Of *SebA
*Sent:* Monday, 28 January 2019 20:16
*To:* Xymon Mailing List <xymon at xymon.com>
*Subject:* [External] [Xymon] Xymon WinPSclient performance


It's great the way features have been added to Xymon WinPSclient, but I
think it's started suffering from feature bloat now, illustrating the
importance of making each feature optional like BBWin did very effectively.
We are seeing memory leaks on Windows 2012 R2 using version 2.28 (I started
another thread about memory leaks a while back - I'll come back to this
issue another time) and more and more CPU time being used up during each
cycle.

It seems that from version v2.21 a slow ASCII encoding conversion was
added:

myServer1 - : xymonclient.ps1  2.21 2017-04-28 user-aada0fa38bf8@xymon.invalid
2019-01-28 19:19:26  Sending to server
2019-01-28 19:19:26  Using ASCII encoding
2019-01-28 19:*20*:25  Connecting to host x.x.x.x        <-- Yes, that
took about *1 minute of 100% processing of 1 of the 8 CPUs/Cores*.
2019-01-28 19:20:26  Sent 2007850 bytes to server    <-- OK, yes, that's
rather a lot of data, but still it's not good.
2019-01-28 19:20:26  Received 130 bytes from server

Compare with:
myServer1 - : xymonclient.ps1  2.19 2016-12-28 user-aada0fa38bf8@xymon.invalid
2019-01-28 19:15:59  Sending to server
2019-01-28 19:15:59  Connecting to host x.x.x.x
2019-01-28 19:15:59  Sent 2006765 bytes to server
2019-01-28 19:16:00  Received 130 bytes from server

Is it possible that converting to ASCII step introduced in v2.21 be made
optional? In the latest version it is possible to send via UTF8, which was
new in v2.21, or convert to ASCII, but it's not possible via configuration
alone, I believe, to have the old behaviour (from v2.19) that worked fine
for us and was far faster.

Another slow process is detecting the number of CPUs (on the same server):

2019-01-28 19:29:05  XymonCollectInfo: Process info
2019-01-28 19:29:05  XymonCollectInfo: calling XymonProcsCPUUtilisation
2019-01-28 19:29:05  XymonCollectInfo: CPU info (WMI)
2019-01-28 19:29:13  Found 8 CPUs, total of 0 cores
2019-01-28 19:29:13  XymonCollectInfo: OS info (including memory) (WMI)
2019-01-28 19:29:13  XymonCollectInfo: Service info (WMI)

*8 seconds* for that.  Why does it need to do this every time?  The
number of CPUs does not normally change without at least rebooting.  It
could do it just on the first cycle and cache it for future cycles.

Another thing that would really speed up processing for us is being able
to dynamically specify the filenames using special characters or something
for the date, e.g. &DD &MM &YY
We have files that rotate with new filesnames and if we could narrow down
the filenames to process it would speed up processing by several more
seconds.
E.g. C:\Temp\myServerLog29-12-18.0.log

In client-local.cfg:

Instead of:
log:C:\Temp\myServerLog*.log:10240
If we could to this, it would mean we process a small fraction of the
number of files:
log:C:\Temp\myServerLog&DD-&MM-&YY.*.log:10240


Kind regards,

SebA


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