# netdata python.d.plugin configuration for ntpd # # This file is in YaML format. Generally the format is: # # name: value # # There are 2 sections: # - global variables # - one or more JOBS # # JOBS allow you to collect values from multiple sources. # Each source will have its own set of charts. # # JOB parameters have to be indented (using spaces only, example below). # ---------------------------------------------------------------------- # Global Variables # These variables set the defaults for all JOBs, however each JOB # may define its own, overriding the defaults. # update_every sets the default data collection frequency. # If unset, the python.d.plugin default is used. # update_every: 1 # priority controls the order of charts at the netdata dashboard. # Lower numbers move the charts towards the top of the page. # If unset, the default for python.d.plugin is used. # priority: 60000 # penalty indicates whether to apply penalty to update_every in case of failures. # Penalty will increase every 5 failed updates in a row. Maximum penalty is 10 minutes. # penalty: yes # ---------------------------------------------------------------------- # JOBS (data collection sources) # # The default JOBS share the same *name*. JOBS with the same name # are mutually exclusive. Only one of them will be allowed running at # any time. This allows autodetection to try several alternatives and # pick the one that works. # # Any number of jobs is supported. # # All python.d.plugin JOBS (for all its modules) support a set of # predefined parameters. These are: # # job_name: # name: myname # the JOB's name as it will appear at the # # dashboard (by default is the job_name) # # JOBs sharing a name are mutually exclusive # update_every: 1 # the JOB's data collection frequency # priority: 60000 # the JOB's order on the dashboard # penalty: yes # the JOB's penalty # # Additionally to the above, ntp also supports the following: # # host: 'localhost' # the host to query # port: '123' # the UDP port where `ntpd` listens # show_peers: no # use `yes` to show peer charts. enabling this # # option is recommended only for debugging, as # # it could possibly imply memory leaks if the # # peers change frequently. # peer_filter: '127\..*' # regex to exclude peers # # by default local peers are hidden # # use `''` to show all peers. # peer_rescan: 60 # interval (>0) to check for new/changed peers # # use `1` to check on every update # # ---------------------------------------------------------------------- # AUTO-DETECTION JOBS # only one of them will run (they have the same name) localhost: name: 'local' host: 'localhost' port: '123' show_peers: no localhost_ipv4: name: 'local' host: '127.0.0.1' port: '123' show_peers: no localhost_ipv6: name: 'local' host: '::1' port: '123' show_peers: no