Commit Graph

3 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jonas Wielicki
c481dd19da Re-introduce human-readable chip types
The chip label generation has been changed in #334 to prefer the
unique device path (e.g. the location on the PCI bus) due to #333.

Here, a new annotation metric ``node_hwmon_chip_names`` is
introduced which allows to link the unique chip sysfs path to a
human-readable chip name which may not be unique among chip sysfs
paths (for example, dual-slot systems have multiple
chipType="coretemp" sensors).

This allows to mitigate the downsides of the solution to #333
(namely that the device path may not be stable across kernels and
reboots) for cases where it does not matter that multiple devices
may have the same human-readable name (e.g. aggregation or where
at most one device with a common chip name is present).

For cases where no human-readable name can be derived, the
annotation metric is not emitted.
2016-12-01 09:59:52 +01:00
Rene Treffer
abe8e297a6 Prefer device path based names over exported names (#334)
* Prefer device path based names over exported names

For some sensors (like coretemp) it is possible that multiple
instances exist, thus base the name on the device path and not on
the exported name.

* Update end-to-end test for dual socket machines

Explicitly have 2 coretemp instances with a symlink for the device
such that the hwmon collector must pick that name (or fail)
2016-10-28 20:25:44 +01:00
Rene Treffer
081ecc5db0 Add hwmon /sensors support (#278)
* Add hwmon support (mainly known from lm-sensors)

This commit adds initial support for linux hardware sensors, exported
through sysfs.

Details of the interface can be found at
https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/hwmon/sysfs-interface

* Add end-to-end test with some real life data

* Cleanup comments on hwmon collector

* Drop raw sensor name from hwmon output

* Let the sensor label be "sensor"

* Add hwmon short description to README.
2016-10-06 16:33:24 +01:00