On Tue, Oct 26, 2010 at 3:26 PM, Rob Munsch <Munsch at phillycarshare.org>wrote:
From: sholmes42 at gmail.com [mailto:sholmes42 at gmail.com] On Behalf Of Steve Holmes Sent: Tuesday, October 26, 2010 3:21 PM To: xymon at xymon.com Subject: Re: [xymon] Question about trend graph scaling
It's because at longer history the values are averaged over longer time intervals. Steve
It would seem that is what is happening, but is that appropriate for things like CPU values? 100% of the CPU is constant over time. And it looks like when he takes a certain path to zoom in, he sees expected values.
I don't know about anyone else but that is exactly the behavior I expect. If the CPU value stays at 100 for long enough it will show up at 100 on all the graphs. But if it peaks at 100 for 10 minutes and then goes back to .1 where it normally sits, then the average over, for example, 5 hours including that 10 minutes is well below 100. The if you zoom in on that same 5 hours you can see the details within that time span including the peak. Where's the problem?
Steve
On Tue, Oct 26, 2010 at 3:07 PM, Lee, Raymond <Raymond.Lee at qwest.com> wrote: Hi all,
When I go to the trend page for a host and then click on a graph to get the 48-hr, 12-day, 48-day, and 576-day graphs, something > > doesn't look right.
For example, I'm looking at the CPU utilization graphs:
- In the 48-hour graph, I see 2 spikes for "user" this morning that were near 60%.
- In the 12-day graph, those same 2 spikes only go up to about 30%.
- In the 48-day graph, the spikes only go up to about 15%.
- In the 576-day graph, the values hover around 10%.
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