516 lines
20 KiB
Python
516 lines
20 KiB
Python
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'''
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Performance Data Helper (PDH) Query Classes
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Wrapper classes for end-users and high-level access to the PDH query
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mechanisms. PDH is a win32-specific mechanism for accessing the
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performance data made available by the system. The Python for Windows
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PDH module does not implement the "Registry" interface, implementing
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the more straightforward Query-based mechanism.
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The basic idea of a PDH Query is an object which can query the system
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about the status of any number of "counters." The counters are paths
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to a particular piece of performance data. For instance, the path
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'\\Memory\\Available Bytes' describes just about exactly what it says
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it does, the amount of free memory on the default computer expressed
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in Bytes. These paths can be considerably more complex than this,
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but part of the point of this wrapper module is to hide that
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complexity from the end-user/programmer.
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EXAMPLE: A more complex Path
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'\\\\RAISTLIN\\PhysicalDisk(_Total)\\Avg. Disk Bytes/Read'
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Raistlin --> Computer Name
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PhysicalDisk --> Object Name
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_Total --> The particular Instance (in this case, all instances, i.e. all drives)
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Avg. Disk Bytes/Read --> The piece of data being monitored.
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EXAMPLE: Collecting Data with a Query
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As an example, the following code implements a logger which allows the
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user to choose what counters they would like to log, and logs those
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counters for 30 seconds, at two-second intervals.
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query = Query()
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query.addcounterbybrowsing()
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query.collectdatafor(30,2)
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The data is now stored in a list of lists as:
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query.curresults
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The counters(paths) which were used to collect the data are:
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query.curpaths
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You can use the win32pdh.ParseCounterPath(path) utility function
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to turn the paths into more easily read values for your task, or
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write the data to a file, or do whatever you want with it.
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OTHER NOTABLE METHODS:
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query.collectdatawhile(period) # start a logging thread for collecting data
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query.collectdatawhile_stop() # signal the logging thread to stop logging
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query.collectdata() # run the query only once
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query.addperfcounter(object, counter, machine=None) # add a standard performance counter
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query.addinstcounter(object, counter,machine=None,objtype = 'Process',volatile=1,format = win32pdh.PDH_FMT_LONG) # add a possibly volatile counter
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### Known bugs and limitations ###
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Due to a problem with threading under the PythonWin interpreter, there
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will be no data logged if the PythonWin window is not the foreground
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application. Workaround: scripts using threading should be run in the
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python.exe interpreter.
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The volatile-counter handlers are possibly buggy, they haven't been
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tested to any extent. The wrapper Query makes it safe to pass invalid
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paths (a -1 will be returned, or the Query will be totally ignored,
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depending on the missing element), so you should be able to work around
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the error by including all possible paths and filtering out the -1's.
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There is no way I know of to stop a thread which is currently sleeping,
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so you have to wait until the thread in collectdatawhile is activated
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again. This might become a problem in situations where the collection
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period is multiple minutes (or hours, or whatever).
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Should make the win32pdh.ParseCounter function available to the Query
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classes as a method or something similar, so that it can be accessed
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by programmes that have just picked up an instance from somewhere.
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Should explicitly mention where QueryErrors can be raised, and create a
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full test set to see if there are any uncaught win32api.error's still
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hanging around.
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When using the python.exe interpreter, the addcounterbybrowsing-
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generated browser window is often hidden behind other windows. No known
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workaround other than Alt-tabing to reach the browser window.
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### Other References ###
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The win32pdhutil module (which should be in the %pythonroot%/win32/lib
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directory) provides quick-and-dirty utilities for one-off access to
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variables from the PDH. Almost everything in that module can be done
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with a Query object, but it provides task-oriented functions for a
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number of common one-off tasks.
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If you can access the MS Developers Network Library, you can find
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information about the PDH API as MS describes it. For a background article,
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try:
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http://msdn.microsoft.com/library/en-us/dnperfmo/html/msdn_pdhlib.asp
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The reference guide for the PDH API was last spotted at:
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http://msdn.microsoft.com/library/en-us/perfmon/base/using_the_pdh_interface.asp
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In general the Python version of the API is just a wrapper around the
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Query-based version of this API (as far as I can see), so you can learn what
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you need to from there. From what I understand, the MSDN Online
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resources are available for the price of signing up for them. I can't
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guarantee how long that's supposed to last. (Or anything for that
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matter).
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http://premium.microsoft.com/isapi/devonly/prodinfo/msdnprod/msdnlib.idc?theURL=/msdn/library/sdkdoc/perfdata_4982.htm
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The eventual plan is for my (Mike Fletcher's) Starship account to include
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a section on NT Administration, and the Query is the first project
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in this plan. There should be an article describing the creation of
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a simple logger there, but the example above is 90% of the work of
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that project, so don't sweat it if you don't find anything there.
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(currently the account hasn't been set up).
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http://starship.skyport.net/crew/mcfletch/
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If you need to contact me immediately, (why I can't imagine), you can
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email me at mcfletch@golden.net, or just post your question to the
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Python newsgroup with a catchy subject line.
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news:comp.lang.python
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### Other Stuff ###
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The Query classes are by Mike Fletcher, with the working code
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being corruptions of Mark Hammonds win32pdhutil module.
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Use at your own risk, no warranties, no guarantees, no assurances,
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if you use it, you accept the risk of using it, etceteras.
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'''
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# Feb 12, 98 - MH added "rawaddcounter" so caller can get exception details.
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import win32pdh, win32api,time, _thread,copy
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class BaseQuery:
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'''
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Provides wrapped access to the Performance Data Helper query
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objects, generally you should use the child class Query
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unless you have need of doing weird things :)
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This class supports two major working paradigms. In the first,
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you open the query, and run it as many times as you need, closing
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the query when you're done with it. This is suitable for static
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queries (ones where processes being monitored don't disappear).
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In the second, you allow the query to be opened each time and
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closed afterward. This causes the base query object to be
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destroyed after each call. Suitable for dynamic queries (ones
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which watch processes which might be closed while watching.)
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'''
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def __init__(self,paths=None):
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'''
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The PDH Query object is initialised with a single, optional
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list argument, that must be properly formatted PDH Counter
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paths. Generally this list will only be provided by the class
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when it is being unpickled (removed from storage). Normal
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use is to call the class with no arguments and use the various
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addcounter functions (particularly, for end user's, the use of
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addcounterbybrowsing is the most common approach) You might
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want to provide the list directly if you want to hard-code the
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elements with which your query deals (and thereby avoid the
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overhead of unpickling the class).
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'''
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self.counters = []
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if paths:
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self.paths = paths
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else:
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self.paths = []
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self._base = None
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self.active = 0
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self.curpaths = []
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def addcounterbybrowsing(self, flags = win32pdh.PERF_DETAIL_WIZARD, windowtitle="Python Browser"):
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'''
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Adds possibly multiple paths to the paths attribute of the query,
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does this by calling the standard counter browsing dialogue. Within
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this dialogue, find the counter you want to log, and click: Add,
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repeat for every path you want to log, then click on close. The
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paths are appended to the non-volatile paths list for this class,
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subclasses may create a function which parses the paths and decides
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(via heuristics) whether to add the path to the volatile or non-volatile
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path list.
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e.g.:
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query.addcounter()
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'''
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win32pdh.BrowseCounters(None,0, self.paths.append, flags, windowtitle)
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def rawaddcounter(self,object, counter, instance = None, inum=-1, machine=None):
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'''
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Adds a single counter path, without catching any exceptions.
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See addcounter for details.
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'''
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path = win32pdh.MakeCounterPath( (machine,object,instance, None, inum,counter) )
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self.paths.append(path)
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def addcounter(self,object, counter, instance = None, inum=-1, machine=None):
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'''
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Adds a single counter path to the paths attribute. Normally
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this will be called by a child class' speciality functions,
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rather than being called directly by the user. (Though it isn't
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hard to call manually, since almost everything is given a default)
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This method is only functional when the query is closed (or hasn't
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yet been opened). This is to prevent conflict in multi-threaded
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query applications).
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e.g.:
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query.addcounter('Memory','Available Bytes')
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'''
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if not self.active:
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try:
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self.rawaddcounter(object, counter, instance, inum, machine)
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return 0
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except win32api.error:
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return -1
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else:
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return -1
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def open(self):
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'''
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Build the base query object for this wrapper,
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then add all of the counters required for the query.
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Raise a QueryError if we can't complete the functions.
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If we are already open, then do nothing.
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'''
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if not self.active: # to prevent having multiple open queries
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# curpaths are made accessible here because of the possibility of volatile paths
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# which may be dynamically altered by subclasses.
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self.curpaths = copy.copy(self.paths)
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try:
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base = win32pdh.OpenQuery()
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for path in self.paths:
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try:
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self.counters.append(win32pdh.AddCounter(base, path))
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except win32api.error: # we passed a bad path
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self.counters.append(0)
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pass
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self._base = base
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self.active = 1
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return 0 # open succeeded
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except: # if we encounter any errors, kill the Query
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try:
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self.killbase(base)
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except NameError: # failed in creating query
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pass
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self.active = 0
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self.curpaths = []
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raise QueryError(self)
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return 1 # already open
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def killbase(self,base=None):
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'''
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### This is not a public method
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Mission critical function to kill the win32pdh objects held
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by this object. User's should generally use the close method
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instead of this method, in case a sub-class has overridden
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close to provide some special functionality.
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'''
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# Kill Pythonic references to the objects in this object's namespace
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self._base = None
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counters = self.counters
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self.counters = []
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# we don't kill the curpaths for convenience, this allows the
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# user to close a query and still access the last paths
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self.active = 0
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# Now call the delete functions on all of the objects
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try:
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map(win32pdh.RemoveCounter,counters)
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except:
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pass
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try:
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win32pdh.CloseQuery(base)
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except:
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pass
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del(counters)
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del(base)
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def close(self):
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'''
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Makes certain that the underlying query object has been closed,
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and that all counters have been removed from it. This is
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important for reference counting.
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You should only need to call close if you have previously called
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open. The collectdata methods all can handle opening and
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closing the query. Calling close multiple times is acceptable.
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'''
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try:
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self.killbase(self._base)
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except AttributeError:
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self.killbase()
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__del__ = close
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def collectdata(self,format = win32pdh.PDH_FMT_LONG):
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'''
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Returns the formatted current values for the Query
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'''
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if self._base: # we are currently open, don't change this
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return self.collectdataslave(format)
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else: # need to open and then close the _base, should be used by one-offs and elements tracking application instances
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self.open() # will raise QueryError if couldn't open the query
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temp = self.collectdataslave(format)
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self.close() # will always close
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return temp
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def collectdataslave(self,format = win32pdh.PDH_FMT_LONG):
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'''
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### Not a public method
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Called only when the Query is known to be open, runs over
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the whole set of counters, appending results to the temp,
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returns the values as a list.
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'''
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try:
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win32pdh.CollectQueryData(self._base)
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temp = []
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for counter in self.counters:
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ok = 0
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try:
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if counter:
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temp.append(win32pdh.GetFormattedCounterValue(counter, format)[1])
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ok = 1
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except win32api.error:
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pass
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if not ok:
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temp.append(-1) # a better way to signal failure???
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return temp
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except win32api.error: # will happen if, for instance, no counters are part of the query and we attempt to collect data for it.
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return [-1] * len(self.counters)
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# pickle functions
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def __getinitargs__(self):
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'''
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### Not a public method
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'''
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return (self.paths,)
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class Query(BaseQuery):
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'''
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Performance Data Helper(PDH) Query object:
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Provides a wrapper around the native PDH query object which
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allows for query reuse, query storage, and general maintenance
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functions (adding counter paths in various ways being the most
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obvious ones).
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'''
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def __init__(self,*args,**namedargs):
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'''
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The PDH Query object is initialised with a single, optional
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list argument, that must be properly formatted PDH Counter
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paths. Generally this list will only be provided by the class
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when it is being unpickled (removed from storage). Normal
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use is to call the class with no arguments and use the various
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addcounter functions (particularly, for end user's, the use of
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addcounterbybrowsing is the most common approach) You might
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want to provide the list directly if you want to hard-code the
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elements with which your query deals (and thereby avoid the
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overhead of unpickling the class).
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'''
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self.volatilecounters = []
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BaseQuery.__init__(*(self,)+args, **namedargs)
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def addperfcounter(self, object, counter, machine=None):
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'''
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A "Performance Counter" is a stable, known, common counter,
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such as Memory, or Processor. The use of addperfcounter by
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end-users is deprecated, since the use of
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addcounterbybrowsing is considerably more flexible and general.
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It is provided here to allow the easy development of scripts
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which need to access variables so common we know them by name
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(such as Memory|Available Bytes), and to provide symmetry with
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the add inst counter method.
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usage:
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query.addperfcounter('Memory', 'Available Bytes')
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It is just as easy to access addcounter directly, the following
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has an identicle effect.
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query.addcounter('Memory', 'Available Bytes')
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'''
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BaseQuery.addcounter(self, object=object, counter=counter, machine=machine)
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def addinstcounter(self, object, counter,machine=None,objtype = 'Process',volatile=1,format = win32pdh.PDH_FMT_LONG):
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'''
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The purpose of using an instcounter is to track particular
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instances of a counter object (e.g. a single processor, a single
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running copy of a process). For instance, to track all python.exe
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instances, you would need merely to ask:
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query.addinstcounter('python','Virtual Bytes')
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You can find the names of the objects and their available counters
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by doing an addcounterbybrowsing() call on a query object (or by
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looking in performance monitor's add dialog.)
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Beyond merely rearranging the call arguments to make more sense,
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if the volatile flag is true, the instcounters also recalculate
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the paths of the available instances on every call to open the
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query.
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'''
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if volatile:
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self.volatilecounters.append((object,counter,machine,objtype,format))
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else:
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self.paths[len(self.paths):] = self.getinstpaths(object,counter,machine,objtype,format)
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def getinstpaths(self,object,counter,machine=None,objtype='Process',format = win32pdh.PDH_FMT_LONG):
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'''
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### Not an end-user function
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Calculate the paths for an instance object. Should alter
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to allow processing for lists of object-counter pairs.
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'''
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items, instances = win32pdh.EnumObjectItems(None,None,objtype, -1)
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# find out how many instances of this element we have...
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instances.sort()
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try:
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cur = instances.index(object)
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except ValueError:
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return [] # no instances of this object
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temp = [object]
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try:
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while instances[cur+1] == object:
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temp.append(object)
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cur = cur+1
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except IndexError: # if we went over the end
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pass
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paths = []
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|
for ind in range(len(temp)):
|
||
|
# can this raise an error?
|
||
|
paths.append(win32pdh.MakeCounterPath( (machine,'Process',object,None,ind,counter) ) )
|
||
|
return paths # should also return the number of elements for naming purposes
|
||
|
|
||
|
def open(self,*args,**namedargs):
|
||
|
'''
|
||
|
Explicitly open a query:
|
||
|
When you are needing to make multiple calls to the same query,
|
||
|
it is most efficient to open the query, run all of the calls,
|
||
|
then close the query, instead of having the collectdata method
|
||
|
automatically open and close the query each time it runs.
|
||
|
There are currently no arguments to open.
|
||
|
'''
|
||
|
# do all the normal opening stuff, self._base is now the query object
|
||
|
BaseQuery.open(*(self,)+args, **namedargs)
|
||
|
# should rewrite getinstpaths to take a single tuple
|
||
|
paths = []
|
||
|
for tup in self.volatilecounters:
|
||
|
paths[len(paths):] = self.getinstpaths(*tup)
|
||
|
for path in paths:
|
||
|
try:
|
||
|
self.counters.append(win32pdh.AddCounter(self._base, path))
|
||
|
self.curpaths.append(path) # if we fail on the line above, this path won't be in the table or the counters
|
||
|
except win32api.error:
|
||
|
pass # again, what to do with a malformed path???
|
||
|
def collectdatafor(self, totalperiod, period=1):
|
||
|
'''
|
||
|
Non-threaded collection of performance data:
|
||
|
This method allows you to specify the total period for which you would
|
||
|
like to run the Query, and the time interval between individual
|
||
|
runs. The collected data is stored in query.curresults at the
|
||
|
_end_ of the run. The pathnames for the query are stored in
|
||
|
query.curpaths.
|
||
|
e.g.:
|
||
|
query.collectdatafor(30,2)
|
||
|
Will collect data for 30seconds at 2 second intervals
|
||
|
'''
|
||
|
tempresults = []
|
||
|
try:
|
||
|
self.open()
|
||
|
for ind in range(totalperiod/period):
|
||
|
tempresults.append(self.collectdata())
|
||
|
time.sleep(period)
|
||
|
self.curresults = tempresults
|
||
|
finally:
|
||
|
self.close()
|
||
|
def collectdatawhile(self, period=1):
|
||
|
'''
|
||
|
Threaded collection of performance data:
|
||
|
This method sets up a simple semaphor system for signalling
|
||
|
when you would like to start and stop a threaded data collection
|
||
|
method. The collection runs every period seconds until the
|
||
|
semaphor attribute is set to a non-true value (which normally
|
||
|
should be done by calling query.collectdatawhile_stop() .)
|
||
|
e.g.:
|
||
|
query.collectdatawhile(2)
|
||
|
# starts the query running, returns control to the caller immediately
|
||
|
# is collecting data every two seconds.
|
||
|
# do whatever you want to do while the thread runs, then call:
|
||
|
query.collectdatawhile_stop()
|
||
|
# when you want to deal with the data. It is generally a good idea
|
||
|
# to sleep for period seconds yourself, since the query will not copy
|
||
|
# the required data until the next iteration:
|
||
|
time.sleep(2)
|
||
|
# now you can access the data from the attributes of the query
|
||
|
query.curresults
|
||
|
query.curpaths
|
||
|
'''
|
||
|
self.collectdatawhile_active = 1
|
||
|
_thread.start_new_thread(self.collectdatawhile_slave,(period,))
|
||
|
def collectdatawhile_stop(self):
|
||
|
'''
|
||
|
Signals the collectdatawhile slave thread to stop collecting data
|
||
|
on the next logging iteration.
|
||
|
'''
|
||
|
self.collectdatawhile_active = 0
|
||
|
def collectdatawhile_slave(self, period):
|
||
|
'''
|
||
|
### Not a public function
|
||
|
Does the threaded work of collecting the data and storing it
|
||
|
in an attribute of the class.
|
||
|
'''
|
||
|
tempresults = []
|
||
|
try:
|
||
|
self.open() # also sets active, so can't be changed.
|
||
|
while self.collectdatawhile_active:
|
||
|
tempresults.append(self.collectdata())
|
||
|
time.sleep(period)
|
||
|
self.curresults = tempresults
|
||
|
finally:
|
||
|
self.close()
|
||
|
|
||
|
# pickle functions
|
||
|
def __getinitargs__(self):
|
||
|
return (self.paths,)
|
||
|
def __getstate__(self):
|
||
|
return self.volatilecounters
|
||
|
def __setstate__(self, volatilecounters):
|
||
|
self.volatilecounters = volatilecounters
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
class QueryError:
|
||
|
def __init__(self, query):
|
||
|
self.query = query
|
||
|
def __repr__(self):
|
||
|
return '<Query Error in %s>'%repr(self.query)
|
||
|
__str__ = __repr__
|
||
|
|