>The GD 'C' package has great Perl interfaces called GD, and GD:Graph
I'm test driving GD as well. Trying out a few other tools that were
mentioned here also. Trying to get a feel for which I like best.
Thanks for all of the replies!
On Mon, Feb 21, 2011 at 3:24 PM, Joe Loiacono wrote:
>
> Max
Max Pierson wrote on 02/21/2011 04:15:46 PM:
> Unfortunately, I'm not savvy with Java at all, so the really cool viz
API's
> wont work for me (there's just something about Java ... I simply can't
get
> into it and I see alot of Java based apps that are resource hogs). I was
> looking at mostly
Hiya Jimmy!!
How has it been?
>For simple visualizations, I think usually a 'native' framework/API is
preferred, e.g. JGraph for java apps.
Unfortunately, I'm not savvy with Java at all, so the really cool viz API's
wont work for me (there's just something about Java ... I simply can't get
int
On 02/20/11 23:45, Jimmy Hess wrote:
> On Fri, Feb 18, 2011 at 1:13 PM, Max Pierson wrote:
>> Anyone out there using something other than rrdtool for creating graphs?? I
>> have a project that will need a trend taken, and unfortunately rrdtool
>> doesn't fit the bill. All of the scripting, data co
On Fri, Feb 18, 2011 at 1:13 PM, Max Pierson wrote:
> Anyone out there using something other than rrdtool for creating graphs?? I
> have a project that will need a trend taken, and unfortunately rrdtool
> doesn't fit the bill. All of the scripting, data collection,
> database archival, etc will be
>Is scaling of rrdtool still a problem for you with rrdcached?
This helps on some of my network/server related graphs, but this data is not
exactly time based (well timestamps are recorded, but not at cyclic
intervals). Plus the dataset is extremely large (100's of millions or rows
already in mySQ
Twitter is releasing a high volume metrics collection store based on
cassandra as open source soon - if you will be scaling big, might be
worth looking into.
On 2/19/11, Max wrote:
> Even with rrdcached, the I/O from many RRD files being updated often
> will hammer the I/O subsydtem of most hosts
Even with rrdcached, the I/O from many RRD files being updated often
will hammer the I/O subsydtem of most hosts :)
We have a host with around 50k RRD data files and rrdcached running,
most are updated every 5 mins, some every minute (Nagios + PNP) - with
RAID 10 and 10k rpm disks the io wait on t
On 2011-02-18 22:03, Max Pierson wrote:
Nothing at all :)My problem is with rrdtool. It doesn't scale for this
project. I was looking into GNUplot, but wanted to see what else was out
there as well.
Is scaling of rrdtool still a problem for you with rrdcached?
http://oss.oetiker.ch/rrdtool/d
>Not to mention others such as found on the exhaustive list:
>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_graphing_software
wow, layer 8 issue on my part :)should have checked wiki before I
posted.
Thanks Jim and thanks for all the feedback. I believe a combination of
Graph.pm and some Perl/PHP foo
On 02/18/2011 05:32 PM, Marco F. Delaurenti wrote:
On Fri, Feb 18, 2011 at 01:13:54PM -0600, Max Pierson wrote:
Hi List,
Anyone out there using something other than rrdtool for creating graphs?? I
have a project that will need a trend taken, and unfortunately rrdtool
doesn't fit the bill. All o
On Fri, Feb 18, 2011 at 01:13:54PM -0600, Max Pierson wrote:
> Hi List,
>
> Anyone out there using something other than rrdtool for creating graphs?? I
> have a project that will need a trend taken, and unfortunately rrdtool
> doesn't fit the bill. All of the scripting, data collection,
> databas
Mostly I've heard bad things about matplotlib under Python. Lots of
good features, but buggy and a bit of a memory hog. How did you find it?
On 02/18/2011 10:34 AM, Peter A. Friend wrote:
I've used gnuplot for several projects and found it very flexible.
Gnuplot is also handy because it's eas
> What's wrong with GNUplot?
Nothing at all :)My problem is with rrdtool. It doesn't scale for this
project. I was looking into GNUplot, but wanted to see what else was out
there as well.
Thanks for all of the on and off list replies so far. I'll follow up after
test driving a few of the men
On Fri, 18 Feb 2011, Max Pierson wrote:
hacks of course :). So really what i'm looking for is something along the
lines of GNUplot. Has anyone used it before and would like to share
experiences?? Seems like it will be able to my plot data accordingly, but
wanted to see if there were any other po
I've used gnuplot for several projects and found it very flexible.
Gnuplot is also handy because it's easy to feed it commands over a
pipe. I also recommend the "Gnuplot In Action" book - it saved me a
ton of time. I have also used matplotlib within Python.
For more interactive graphs I've
On Fri, 18 Feb 2011, Max Pierson wrote:
Hi List,
Anyone out there using something other than rrdtool for creating graphs?? I
have a project that will need a trend taken, and unfortunately rrdtool
doesn't fit the bill. All of the scripting, data collection,
database archival, etc will be custom
Thomas Boutrell's 'GD'.
http://www.libgd.org/Main_Page
Joe
From:
Max Pierson
To:
nanog group
Date:
02/18/2011 02:15 PM
Subject:
Graph Utils (Open-Source)
Hi List,
Anyone out there using something other than rrdtool for creating graphs??
I
have a project that will nee
On 02/18/2011 09:13 AM, Max Pierson wrote:
Hi List,
Anyone out there using something other than rrdtool for creating graphs?? I
have a project that will need a trend taken, and unfortunately rrdtool
doesn't fit the bill. All of the scripting, data collection,
database archival, etc will be custo
Hi List,
Anyone out there using something other than rrdtool for creating graphs?? I
have a project that will need a trend taken, and unfortunately rrdtool
doesn't fit the bill. All of the scripting, data collection,
database archival, etc will be custom written or is already done (with some
hacks
20 matches
Mail list logo