**Retired project**. This had it's uses for some of my more esoteric systems (that only had busybox for example) but I've sinced moved to an infrastructure that all supports [[https://collectd.org/|collectd]]. ====== Load logger ====== A simple bash script to log the datetime and system load to a file every minute. I wanted something that didn't rely on having any other programs installed (though it does rely on the /proc/ filesystem and some basic utilities like free, ps, awk, bc). It saves data in the following format: Server ID, Date/Time, CPU usage (%), CPU max, Memory Total (Mb), Memory Used (Mb), Memory Free (Mb), Memory Shared (Mb), Memory Buffered/Cached (Mb), Memory Available (Mb), 1 minute load average, 5 minute load average, 15 minute load average, process count, network usage (one column per interface in the format [interface name, received bytes, transmitted bytes]) #!/bin/bash ID='SERVER1' CPU_COUNT=`cat /proc/cpuinfo | grep processor | wc -l` MAX_CPU=$(($CPU_COUNT * 100)) printf -v date '%(%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S)T' -1 CPU_USAGE=`ps -ax -h -o pcpu | paste "-sd+" | bc` MEM_USAGE=`free -m | grep 'Mem:' | awk -v OFS="," '{print ($2,$3,$4,$5,$6,$7)}'` LOAD_AVG=`awk -v OFS="," '{split($4,arr,"/")} {print $1,$2,$3,arr[2]}' /proc/loadavg` NET_USAGE=`awk -v ORS="," 'NR>2{print $1,$2,$9}' /proc/net/dev` OUTPUT=$ID','$date','$CPU_USAGE','$MAX_CPU','$MEM_USAGE','$LOAD_AVG','$NET_USAGE # to trim that last awkward comma echo $OUTPUT | awk '{gsub(/,$/,""); print $0}' Example output SERVER1,2020-04-19 17:42:13,17.1,400,15929,3401,6050,545,6477,11664,0.28,0.24,0.26,798,eno1: 0 0,lo: 43147702 0,pan1: 0 0,wlp2s0: 29433068499 0 SERVER1,2020-04-19 17:42:41,17.1,400,15929,3404,6042,551,6483,11656,0.17,0.21,0.25,795,eno1: 0 0,lo: 43148718 0,pan1: 0 0,wlp2s0: 29433079099 0 You can log this to a file using cron: * * * * * /home/seven/bin/save_load.sh >> /home/seven/data/load.log ===== Central logging ===== Alternatively, you can send this information to a central location. I wrote a quick script to save this to a database then used CURL to POST it to the server. I swapped the echo line from the script above with something like this: curl --request POST "https://myserver/" --data-urlencode "data=$OUTPUT"