stats (old_stats)¶
Deprecated since version v2.3.0.
Dovecot supports gathering statistics (CPU, disk usage, etc.) from mail processes (IMAP, POP3, LMTP, etc.) to the stats process. The stats process can later be queried what’s going on in the system. With imap_stats plugin you can get per-command level statistics for IMAP commands.
There are different zoom levels you can look at the statistics:
command: Per-IMAP command
session: Per IMAP/POP3 connection
user: Per user (all of user’s sessions summed up)
domain: Per domain (all of domain’s users summed up)
ip: Per IP address (all sessions from the IP summed up)
global: Everything summed up
New in version 2.2.16.
Basic Configuration¶
mail_plugins = $mail_plugins stats
protocol imap {
mail_plugins = $mail_plugins imap_stats
}
plugin {
# how often to session statistics (must be set)
stats_refresh = 30 secs
# track per-IMAP command statistics (optional)
stats_track_cmds = yes
}
You’ll also need to give enough permissions for mail processes to be able to write to stats-mail fifo.
For example if you use a single vmail user for mail access:
service stats {
fifo_listener stats-mail {
user = vmail
mode = 0600
}
}
Memory usage configuration¶
The stats process attempts to keep memory usage below a specified amount. This
value is only approximate because of extra overhead caused by malloc()
itself.
stats_memory_limit = 16 M
Once the memory limit is reached, oldest statistics are freed from memory. Different statistics levels have different timeout limits, which are configured in:
stats_command_min_time=1 mins
stats_domain_min_time=12 hours
stats_ip_min_time=12 hours
stats_session_min_time=15 mins
stats_user_min_time=1 hours
So for example the above means:
An IMAP command is kept in memory for at least 1 minute after it has finished
A user is kept in memory for 1 hour after its last session has disconnected.
The stats process attempts to honor these min_time-settings
, but if memory
is tight it can go below these values to honor the stats_memory_limit
setting.
Statistics gathered¶
Statistics gathered internally by the stats process:
num_logins: Number of logins
New in version 2.2.14.
num_cmds: Number of IMAP commands run
New in version 2.2.14.
num_connected_sessions: Number of current IMAP sessions
New in version 2.2.14.
Statistics gathered using the getrusage()
system call:
user_cpu: User CPU (seconds.microseconds)
sys_cpu: System CPU (seconds.microseconds)
clock_time: Wall-clock time (seconds.microseconds). Doesn’t include time spent waiting in ioloop, which means it doesn’t include (most of) the time spent waiting on client network traffic.
New in version v2.2.11.
min_faults: Minor page faults (page reclaims)
maj_faults: Major page faults
vol_cs: Voluntary context switches
invol_cs: Involuntary context switches
disk_input: Number of bytes read from disk
disk_output: Number of bytes written to disk
The disk_input and disk_output attempt to count the actual read
/write
bytes to physical disk, so e.g. reads from OS’s cache aren’t counted. Note that
not all operating systems and filesystem support this, instead they simply show
these values always as 0.
Statistics gathered from /proc/self/io
output (Linux-only):
read_count: Number of read() syscalls
write_count: Number of write() syscalls
read_bytes: Number of bytes read using read() syscalls
write_bytes: Number of bytes written using write() syscalls
Note
The above numbers are not only about disk I/O, but also about network I/O, Dovecot’s IPC and every other kind of reads/writes as well.
Statistics gathered by Dovecot’s lib-storage internally:
mail_lookup_path: Number of open() and stat() calls (i.e. path lookups)
mail_lookup_attr: Number of stat() and fstat() calls
mail_read_count: Number of read() calls for message data (e.g. index files not counted)
mail_read_bytes: Number of message bytes read()
mail_cache_hits: Number of cache hits from
dovecot.index.cache
file
Note
Statistics are collected only on backends so stats service doesn’t do anything on directors and proxies.
doveadm stats¶
top¶
doveadm stats top [<sort field>]
The top command gives a very simple top-like view of connected sessions. The optional sort field is one of:
disk: disk_input and disk_output summed up (default)
cpu: user_cpu and sys_cpu summed up
any other statistics field
This top isn’t very good, but a much better one can be found as a Perl script: stats-top.pl, which also requires stats.pl and tab-formatter.pl.
dump¶
doveadm stats dump <level> [<filter>]
The dump command shows a raw output of the statistics. The level parameter is one of the levels listed at the top of this page (e.g. session). The filter can contain zero of more filters:
connected: The session must be currently connected (or the user/domain/ip must have at least one session that is currently connected)
since=<timestamp>: Last update was since this UNIX timestamp
user=<wildcard>: Username matches this wildcard
domain=<wildcard>: Domain name matches this wildcard
ip=<ip>[/bits]: IP address matches this IP/network (e.g. 192.168.1.0/24)
If nothing matches the filter, the output is a single empty line. Otherwise it begins with a header line followed by data lines. Each line has a list of fields separated by TABs. The header describes what the data fields are. The list of fields depends on what level you’re listing. Some of the fields are:
session: 128 bit session GUID in hex format. This uniquely identifies a single session. Used by commands and sessions.
connected: Is the client currently connected? 0=no, 1=yes.
pid: Process ID of the session. If the session is no longer connected, the PID may not exist anymore.
last_update: UNIX timestamp of the last time this data was updated
reset_timestamp: UNIX timestamp of when this user/domain/ip structure was created. This is useful when you want to track incrementally what changed:
If timestamp is the same as in your previous lookup, you can simply count
different=new_value - previous_value
.If timestamp has changed since your previous lookup, the statistics were reset to zero since and the
difference=new_value
.
Stats protocol¶
You can connect to stats process via $base_dir/stats
UNIX socket, or you
can simply add more UNIX/TCP listeners to the stats service, e.g.:
service stats {
inet_listener {
address = 127.0.0.1
port = 24242
}
}
The protocol is almost entirely identical to doveadm stats dump
command’s
parameters and output. The only difference is that you prefix your request with
EXPORT<tab>.
For example:
EXPORT<tab>session<tab>connected<lf>
The output will be identical to doveadm stats dump session connected
command.
Carbon support¶
New in version v2.2.27.
You can configure dovecot to send statistics periodically in carbon format.
To do this, configure
stats_carbon_server=ip:port # default port 2003
stats_carbon_name=hostname # do not use dots
stats_carbon_interval=30s # default is 30 seconds
service stats {
# this is needed if you want stats to be sent when no one is connected
process_min_avail=1
}
This will send all available global statistics in carbon format