glances/docs/quickstart.rst

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.. _quickstart:
Quickstart
==========
This page gives a good introduction to how to get started with Glances.
Glances offers three modes:
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- Standalone
- Client/Server
- Web server
Standalone Mode
---------------
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If you want to monitor your local machine, open a console/terminal
and simply run:
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.. code-block:: console
$ glances
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Glances should start (press 'q' or 'ESC' to exit):
.. image:: _static/screenshot-wide.png
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It is also possible to display RAW (Python) stats directly to stdout using:
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.. code-block:: console
$ glances --stdout cpu.user,mem.used,load
cpu.user: 30.7
mem.used: 3278204928
load: {'cpucore': 4, 'min1': 0.21, 'min5': 0.4, 'min15': 0.27}
cpu.user: 3.4
mem.used: 3275251712
load: {'cpucore': 4, 'min1': 0.19, 'min5': 0.39, 'min15': 0.27}
...
or in a CSV format thanks to the stdout-csv option:
.. code-block:: console
$ glances --stdout-csv now,cpu.user,mem.used,load
now,cpu.user,mem.used,load.cpucore,load.min1,load.min5,load.min15
2018-12-08 22:04:20 CEST,7.3,5948149760,4,1.04,0.99,1.04
2018-12-08 22:04:23 CEST,5.4,5949136896,4,1.04,0.99,1.04
...
or as a JSON format thanks to the stdout-json option (attribute not supported in this mode):
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.. code-block:: console
$ glances --stdout-json cpu,mem
cpu: {"total": 29.0, "user": 24.7, "nice": 0.0, "system": 3.8, "idle": 71.4, "iowait": 0.0, "irq": 0.0, "softirq": 0.0, "steal": 0.0, "guest": 0.0, "guest_nice": 0.0, "time_since_update": 1, "cpucore": 4, "ctx_switches": 0, "interrupts": 0, "soft_interrupts": 0, "syscalls": 0}
mem: {"total": 7837949952, "available": 2919079936, "percent": 62.8, "used": 4918870016, "free": 2919079936, "active": 2841214976, "inactive": 3340550144, "buffers": 546799616, "cached": 3068141568, "shared": 788156416}
...
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Note: It will display one line per stat per refresh.
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Client/Server Mode
------------------
If you want to remotely monitor a machine called ``server``, from
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another one, called ``client``, just run on the server:
.. code-block:: console
server$ glances -s
and on the client:
.. code-block:: console
client$ glances -c @server
where ``@server`` is the IP address or hostname of the server.
In server mode, you can set the bind address with ``-B ADDRESS`` and
the listening TCP port with ``-p PORT``.
In client mode, you can set the TCP port of the server with ``-p PORT``.
Default binding address is ``0.0.0.0`` (Glances will listen on all the
available network interfaces) and TCP port is ``61209``.
In client/server mode, limits are set by the server side.
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Central client
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
.. image:: _static/browser.png
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Glances can centralize available Glances servers using the ``--browser``
option. The server list can be statically defined via the configuration
file (section ``[serverlist]``).
Example:
.. code-block:: ini
[serverlist]
# Define the static servers list
server_1_name=xps
server_1_alias=xps
server_1_port=61209
server_2_name=win
server_2_port=61235
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Glances can also detect and display all Glances servers available on
your network via the ``zeroconf`` protocol (not available on Windows):
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To start the central client, use the following option:
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.. code-block:: console
client$ glances --browser
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.. note::
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Use ``--disable-autodiscover`` to disable the auto-discovery mode.
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When the list is displayed, you can navigate through the Glances servers with
up/down keys. It is also possible to sort the server using:
- '1' is normal (do not sort)
- '2' is using sorting with ascending order (ONLINE > SNMP > PROTECTED > OFFLINE > UNKNOWN)
- '3' is using sorting with descending order (UNKNOWN > OFFLINE > PROTECTED > SNMP > ONLINE)
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SNMP
^^^^
As an experimental feature, if Glances server is not detected by the
client, the latter will try to grab stats using the ``SNMP`` protocol:
.. code-block:: console
client$ glances -c @snmpserver
.. note::
Stats grabbed by SNMP request are limited and OS-dependent.
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A SNMP server should be installed and configured...
IPv6
^^^^
Glances is ``IPv6`` compatible. Just use the ``-B ::`` option to bind to
all IPv6 addresses.
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Web Server Mode
---------------
.. image:: _static/screenshot-web.png
If you want to remotely monitor a machine called ``server``, from any
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device with a web browser, just run the server with the ``-w`` option:
.. code-block:: console
server$ glances -w
then, on the client, enter the following URL in your favorite web browser:
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::
http://@server:61208
where ``@server`` is the IP address or hostname of the server.
To change the refresh rate of the page, add the period in seconds
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at the end of the URL. For example, to refresh the page every ``10``
seconds:
::
http://@server:61208/10
The Glances web interface follows responsive web design principles.
Here's a screenshot from Chrome on Android:
.. image:: _static/screenshot-web2.png
How do you protect your server (or Web server) with a login/password ?
------------------------------------------------------------------
You can set a password to access the server using the ``--password``.
By default, the login is ``glances`` but you can change it with
``--username``.
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If you want, the SHA password will be stored in ``<login>.pwd`` file (in
the same folder where the Glances configuration file is stored, so
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~/.config/glances/ on GNU Linux operating system).
Next time you run the server/client, password will not be asked. To set a
specific username, you can use the -u <username> option.
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It is also possible to set the default password in the Glances configuration
file:
.. code-block:: ini
[passwords]
# Define the passwords list
# Syntax: host=password
# Where: host is the hostname
# password is the clear password
# Additionally (and optionally) a default password could be defined
localhost=mylocalhostpassword
default=mydefaultpassword