Code Monkey home page Code Monkey logo

feedgnuplot's Introduction

#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;
use Getopt::Long;
use Time::HiRes qw( usleep gettimeofday tv_interval );
use IO::Handle;
use List::Util qw( first );
use Scalar::Util qw( looks_like_number );
use Text::ParseWords;
use threads;
use threads::shared;
use Thread::Queue;
use Pod::Usage;

my $VERSION = 1.24;

my %options;
interpretCommandline(\%options);

my $gnuplotVersion = getGnuplotVersion();

# list containing the plot data. Each element is a reference to a list, representing the data for
# one curve. The first 'point' is a hash describing various curve parameters. The rest are all
# references to lists of (x,y) tuples
my @curves = ();

# list mapping curve names to their indices in the @curves list
my %curveIndices = ();

# now start the data acquisition and plotting threads
my $dataQueue;

# latest domain variable present in our data
my $latestX;

# The domain of the current point
my @domain;

# Whether any new data has arrived since the last replot
my $haveNewData;

# when the last replot happened
my $last_replot_time = [gettimeofday];

# whether the previous replot was timer based
my $last_replot_is_from_timer = 1;

my $streamingFinished : shared = undef;

if($options{stream})
{
  $dataQueue  = Thread::Queue->new();
  my $addThr  = threads->create(\&mainThread);

  # spawn the plot updating thread. If I'm replotting from a data trigger, I don't need this
  my $plotThr = threads->create(\&plotUpdateThread) if $options{stream} > 0;

  while(<>)
  {
    chomp;

    # place every line of input to the queue, so that the plotting thread can process it. if we are
    # using an implicit domain (x = line number), then we send it on the data queue also, since
    # $. is not meaningful in the plotting thread
    if(!$options{domain})
    {
      $_ .= " $.";
    }
    $dataQueue->enqueue($_);
  }

  $streamingFinished = 1;

  $plotThr->join() if defined $plotThr;
  $addThr->join();
}
else
{ mainThread(); }





sub interpretCommandline
{
  # if I'm using a self-plotting data file with a #! line, then $ARGV[0] will contain ALL of the
  # options and $ARGV[1] will contain the data file to plot. In this case I need to split $ARGV[0] so
  # that GetOptions() can parse it correctly. On the other hand, if I'm plotting normally (not with
  # #!)  a file with spaces in the filename, I don't want to split the filename. Hopefully this logic
  # takes care of both those cases.
  if (exists $ARGV[0] && !-r $ARGV[0])
  {
    unshift @ARGV, shellwords shift @ARGV;
  }

  my $options = shift;

  # everything off by default:
  # do not stream in the data by default
  # point plotting by default.
  # no monotonicity checks by default
  # normal histograms by default
  $options{ maxcurves } = 100;
  $options{ histstyle}  = 'freq';

  # Previously I was using 'legend=s%' and 'curvestyle=s%' for curve addressing. This had cleaner
  # syntax, but disregarded the order of the given options. This resulted in arbitrarily ordered
  # curves. I thus make parse these into lists, and then also make hashes, for later use

  # needed for these to be parsed into an array-ref
  $options{legend}     = [];
  $options{curvestyle} = [];
  $options{histogram}  = [];
  GetOptions($options, 'stream:s', 'domain!', 'dataid!', '3d!', 'colormap!', 'lines!', 'points!',
             'circles', 'legend=s{2}', 'autolegend!', 'xlabel=s', 'ylabel=s', 'y2label=s', 'zlabel=s',
             'title=s', 'xlen=f', 'ymin=f', 'ymax=f', 'xmin=f', 'xmax=f', 'y2min=f', 'y2max=f',
             'zmin=f', 'zmax=f', 'y2=s@', 'curvestyle=s{2}', 'curvestyleall=s', 'extracmds=s@',
             'square!', 'square_xy!', 'hardcopy=s', 'maxcurves=i', 'monotonic!',
             'histogram=s@', 'binwidth=f', 'histstyle=s',
             'terminal=s',
             'extraValuesPerPoint=i', 'help', 'dump', 'version',
             'geometry=s') or pod2usage( -exitval => 1,
                                         -verbose => 1, # synopsis and args
                                         -output  => \*STDERR );


  # handle various cmdline-option errors
  if ( $options->{help} )
  {
    pod2usage( -exitval => 0,
               -verbose => 1, # synopsis and args
               -output  => \*STDOUT );
  }

  if( $options->{version} )
  {
    print "feedgnuplot version $VERSION\n";
    exit 0;
  }

  # no global style if one isn't given
  $options->{curvestyleall} = '' unless defined $options->{curvestyleall};

  # expand options that are given as comma-separated lists
  for my $listkey (qw(histogram y2))
  {
    @{$options{$listkey}} = map split('\s*,\s*', $_), @{$options{$listkey}}
      if defined $options{$listkey};
  }

  # --legend and --curvestyle options are conceptually hashes, but are parsed as
  # arrays in order to preserve the ordering. I parse both of these into hashes
  # because those are useful to have later. After this I can access individual
  # legends with $options{legend_hash}{curveid}
  for my $listkey (qw(legend curvestyle))
  {
    $options{"${listkey}_hash"} = {};

    my $n = scalar @{$options{$listkey}}/2;
    foreach my $idx (0..$n-1)
    {
      $options{"${listkey}_hash"}{$options{$listkey}[$idx*2]} = $options{$listkey}[$idx*2 + 1];
    }
  }

  if ( defined $options->{hardcopy} && defined $options->{stream} )
  {
    print STDERR "Warning: since we're making a hardcopy, I'm disabling streaming\n";
    delete $options->{stream};
  }

  # parse stream option. Allowed only numbers >= 0 or 'trigger'. After this code
  # $options->{stream} is
  #  -1 for triggered replotting
  #  >0 for timed replotting
  #  undef if not streaming
  if(defined $options->{stream})
  {
    # if no streaming period is given, default to 1Hz.
    $options->{stream} = 1 if $options->{stream} eq '';

    if( !looks_like_number $options->{stream} )
    {
      if($options->{stream} eq 'trigger')
      {
        $options->{stream} = 0;
      }
      else
      {
        print STDERR "--stream can only take in values >=0 or 'trigger'\n";
        exit -1;
      }
    }

    if ( $options->{stream} == 0 )
    {
      $options->{stream} = -1;
    }
    elsif ( $options->{stream} <= 0)
    {
      print STDERR "--stream can only take in values >=0 or 'trigger'\n";
      exit -1;
    }
  }

  if ($options->{colormap})
  {
    # colormap styles all curves with palette. Seems like there should be a way to do this with a
    # global setting, but I can't get that to work
    $options->{curvestyleall} .= ' palette';
  }

  if ( $options->{'3d'} )
  {
    if ( !$options->{domain} )
    {
      print STDERR "--3d only makes sense with --domain\n";
      exit -1;
    }

    if ( defined $options->{y2min} || defined $options->{y2max} || defined $options->{y2} )
    {
      print STDERR "--3d does not make sense with --y2...\n";
      exit -1;
    }

    if ( defined $options->{xlen} )
    {
      print STDERR "--3d does not make sense with --xlen\n";
      exit -1;
    }

    if ( defined $options->{monotonic} )
    {
      print STDERR "--3d does not make sense with --monotonic\n";
      exit -1;
    }

    if ( defined $options->{binwidth} || @{$options->{histogram}} )
    {
      print STDERR "--3d does not make sense with histograms\n";
      exit -1;
    }
  }
  else
  {
    if(!$options->{colormap})
    {
      if ( defined $options->{zmin} || defined $options->{zmax} || defined $options->{zlabel} )
      {
        print STDERR "--zmin/zmax/zlabel only makes sense with --3d or --colormap\n";
        exit -1;
      }
    }

    if ( defined $options->{square_xy} )
    {
      print STDERR "--square_xy only makes sense with --3d\n";
      exit -1;
    }
  }

  if(defined $options{xlen} && !$options{stream} )
  {
    print STDERR "--xlen does not make sense without --stream\n";
    exit -1;
  }

  # --xlen implies an order to the data, so I force monotonicity
  $options{monotonic} = 1 if defined $options{xlen};

  if( $options{histstyle} !~ /freq|cum|uniq|cnorm/ )
  {
    print STDERR "unknown histstyle. Allowed are 'freq...', 'cum...', 'uniq...', 'cnorm...'\n";
    exit -1;
  }
}

sub getGnuplotVersion
{
  open(GNUPLOT_VERSION, 'gnuplot --version |') or die "Couldn't run gnuplot";
  my ($gnuplotVersion) = <GNUPLOT_VERSION> =~ /gnuplot\s*(\d*\.\d*)/;
  if (!$gnuplotVersion)
  {
    print STDERR "Couldn't find the version of gnuplot. Does it work? Trying anyway...\n";
    $gnuplotVersion = 0;
  }
  close(GNUPLOT_VERSION);

  return $gnuplotVersion;
}

sub plotUpdateThread
{
  while(! $streamingFinished)
  {
    usleep( $options{stream} * 1e6 );

    # indicate that the timer was the replot source
    $dataQueue->enqueue('replot timertick');
  }

  $dataQueue->enqueue(undef);
}

sub mainThread
{
    my $valuesPerPoint = 1;
    if($options{extraValuesPerPoint}) { $valuesPerPoint += $options{extraValuesPerPoint}; }
    if($options{colormap})            { $valuesPerPoint++; }
    if($options{circles} )            { $valuesPerPoint++; }

    local *PIPE;
    my $dopersist = '';

    if($gnuplotVersion >= 4.3)
    {
      $dopersist = '--persist' if(!$options{stream});
    }

    if(exists $options{dump})
    {
      *PIPE = *STDOUT;
    }
    else
    {
      my $geometry = defined $options{geometry} ?
        "-geometry $options{geometry}" : '';
      open PIPE, "|gnuplot $geometry $dopersist" or die "Can't initialize gnuplot\n";
    }
    autoflush PIPE 1;

    my $outputfile;
    my $outputfileType;
    if( $options{hardcopy})
    {
      $outputfile = $options{hardcopy};
      $outputfile =~ /\.(eps|ps|pdf|png|svg)$/i;
      $outputfileType = $1 ? lc $1 : '';

      my %terminalOpts =
      ( eps  => 'postscript solid color enhanced eps',
        ps   => 'postscript solid color landscape 10',
        pdf  => 'pdfcairo solid color font ",10" size 11in,8.5in',
        png  => 'png size 1280,1024',
        svg  => 'svg');

      $options{terminal} ||= $terminalOpts{$outputfileType}
        if $terminalOpts{$outputfileType};

      die "Asked to plot to file '$outputfile', but I don't know which terminal to use, and no --terminal given"
        unless $options{terminal};
    }
    print PIPE "set terminal $options{terminal}\n" if $options{terminal};
    print PIPE "set output \"$outputfile\"\n"      if $outputfile;


    # If a bound isn't given I want to set it to the empty string, so I can communicate it simply to
    # gnuplot
    $options{xmin}  = '' unless defined $options{xmin};
    $options{xmax}  = '' unless defined $options{xmax};
    $options{ymin}  = '' unless defined $options{ymin};
    $options{ymax}  = '' unless defined $options{ymax};
    $options{y2min} = '' unless defined $options{y2min};
    $options{y2max} = '' unless defined $options{y2max};
    $options{zmin}  = '' unless defined $options{zmin};
    $options{zmax}  = '' unless defined $options{zmax};

    print PIPE "set xtics\n";
    if($options{y2})
    {
      print PIPE "set ytics nomirror\n";
      print PIPE "set y2tics\n";
      # if any of the ranges are given, set the range
      print PIPE "set y2range [$options{y2min}:$options{y2max}]\n" if length( $options{y2min} . $options{y2max} );
    }

    # set up plotting style
    my $style = '';
    if($options{lines})  { $style .= 'lines';}
    if($options{points}) { $style .= 'points';}
    if($options{circles})
    {
      $options{curvestyleall} = "with circles $options{curvestyleall}";
    }

    # if any of the ranges are given, set the range
    print PIPE "set xrange [$options{xmin}:$options{xmax}]\n" if length( $options{xmin} . $options{xmax} );
    print PIPE "set yrange [$options{ymin}:$options{ymax}]\n" if length( $options{ymin} . $options{ymax} );
    print PIPE "set zrange [$options{zmin}:$options{zmax}]\n" if length( $options{zmin} . $options{zmax} );
    print PIPE "set style data $style\n" if $style;
    print PIPE "set grid\n";

    print(PIPE "set xlabel  \"$options{xlabel }\"\n") if defined $options{xlabel};
    print(PIPE "set ylabel  \"$options{ylabel }\"\n") if defined $options{ylabel};
    print(PIPE "set zlabel  \"$options{zlabel }\"\n") if defined $options{zlabel};
    print(PIPE "set y2label \"$options{y2label}\"\n") if defined $options{y2label};
    print(PIPE "set title   \"$options{title  }\"\n") if defined $options{title};

    if($options{square})
    {
      # set a square aspect ratio. Gnuplot does this differently for 2D and 3D plots
      if(! $options{'3d'})
      {
        print(PIPE "set size ratio -1\n");
      }
      else
      {
        print(PIPE "set view equal xyz\n");
      }
    }

    if($options{square_xy})
    {
      print(PIPE "set view equal xy\n");
    }

    if($options{colormap})
    {
      print PIPE "set cbrange [$options{zmin}:$options{zmax}]\n" if length( $options{zmin} . $options{zmax} );
    }

# For the specified values, set the legend entries to 'title "blah blah"'
    if(@{$options{legend}})
    {
      # @{$options{legend}} is a list where consecutive pairs are (curveID,
      # legend). I use $options{legend} here instead of $options{legend_hash}
      # because I create a new curve when I see a new one, and the hash is
      # unordered, thus messing up the ordering
      my $n = scalar @{$options{legend}}/2;
      foreach my $idx (0..$n-1)
      {
        setCurveLabel($options{legend}[$idx*2    ],
                      $options{legend}[$idx*2 + 1]);
      }
    }

# add the extra curve options
    if(@{$options{curvestyle}})
    {
      # @{$options{curvestyle}} is a list where consecutive pairs are (curveID,
      # style). I use $options{curvestyle} here instead of
      # $options{curvestyle_hash} because I create a new curve when I see a new
      # one, and the hash is unordered, thus messing up the ordering
      my $n = scalar @{$options{curvestyle}}/2;
      foreach my $idx (0..$n-1)
      {
        addCurveOption($options{curvestyle}[$idx*2    ],
                       $options{curvestyle}[$idx*2 + 1]);
      }
    }

# For the values requested to be printed on the y2 axis, set that
    foreach (@{$options{y2}})
    {
      addCurveOption($_, 'axes x1y2 linewidth 3');
    }

# add the extra global options
    if($options{extracmds})
    {
      foreach (@{$options{extracmds}})
      {
        print(PIPE "$_\n");
      }
    }

# set up histograms
    $options{binwidth} ||= 1; # if no binwidth given, set it to 1
    print PIPE
      "set boxwidth $options{binwidth}\n" .
      "histbin(x) = $options{binwidth} * floor(0.5 + x/$options{binwidth})\n";
    foreach (@{$options{histogram}})
    {
      setCurveAsHistogram( $_ );
    }

    # regexp for a possibly floating point, possibly scientific notation number
    my $numRE   = '-?\d*\.?\d+(?:[Ee][-+]?\d+)?';

    # a point may be preceded by an id
    my $pointRE = $options{dataid} ? '(\S+)\s+' : '()';
    $pointRE .= '(' . join('\s+', ($numRE) x $valuesPerPoint) . ')';
    $pointRE = qr/$pointRE/;

    # I should be using the // operator, but I'd like to be compatible with perl 5.8
    while( $_ = (defined $dataQueue ? $dataQueue->dequeue() : <>))
    {
      next if /^#/o;

      if(    $options{stream} && /^clear/o )
      { clearCurves(); }

      elsif( $options{stream} && /^replot/o )
      {
        # /timertick/ determines if the timer was the source of the replot
        replot( /timertick/ );
      }
      elsif(! /^replot/o)
      {
        # parse the incoming data lines. The format is
        # x id0 dat0 id1 dat1 ....
        # where idX is the ID of the curve that datX corresponds to
        #
        # $options{domain} indicates whether the initial 'x' is given or not (if not, the line
        # number is used)
        # $options{dataid} indicates whether idX is given or not (if not, the point order in the
        # line is used)
        # 3d plots require $options{domain}, and dictate "x y" for the domain instead of just "x"

        if($options{domain})
        {
          /($numRE)/go or next;
          $domain[0] = $1;
          if($options{'3d'})
          {
            /($numRE)/go or next;
            $domain[1] = $1;
          }
          elsif( $options{monotonic} )
          {
            if( defined $latestX && $domain[0] < $latestX )
            {
              # the x-coordinate of the new point is in the past, so I wipe out
              # all the data and start anew. Before I wipe the old data, I
              # replot the old data
              replot();
              clearCurves();
              $latestX = undef;
            }
            else
            { $latestX = $domain[0]; }
          }

        }
        else
        {
          # since $. is not meaningful in the plotting thread if we're using the data queue, we pass
          # $. on the data queue in that case
          if(defined $dataQueue)
          {
            s/ ([\d]+)$//o;
            $domain[0] = $1;
          }
          else
          {
            $domain[0] = $.;
          }
        }

        my $id = -1;
        while (/$pointRE/go)
        {
          if($1 ne '') {$id = $1;}
          else         {$id++;   }

          pushPoint(getCurve($id),
                    [@domain, split( /\s+/, $2)]);
        }
      }
    }

    # finished reading in all. Plot what we have
    plotStoredData();

    if ( $options{hardcopy})
    {
      print PIPE "set output\n";
      # sleep until the plot file exists, and it is closed. Sometimes the output is
      # still being written at this point
      usleep(100_000) until -e $outputfile;
      usleep(100_000) until(system("fuser -s \"$outputfile\""));

      print "Wrote output to $outputfile\n";
      return;
    }

    # we persist gnuplot, so we shouldn't need this sleep. However, once
    # gnuplot exits, but the persistent window sticks around, you can no
    # longer interactively zoom the plot. So we still sleep
    sleep(100000) unless $options{dump};
}

sub pruneOldData
{
  my ($oldestx) = @_;

  foreach my $curve (@curves)
  {
    if( @$curve > 1 )
    {
      if( my $firstInWindow = first {$curve->[$_][0] >= $oldestx} 1..$#$curve )
      { splice( @$curve, 1, $firstInWindow-1 ); }
      else
      { splice( @$curve, 1); }
    }
  }
}

sub plotStoredData
{
  my ($xmin, $xmax) = @_;
  print PIPE "set xrange [$xmin:$xmax]\n" if defined $xmin;

  # get the options for those curves that have any data
  my @nonemptyCurves = grep {@$_ > 1} @curves;
  my @extraopts = map {$_->[0]{options}} @nonemptyCurves;

  my $body = join(', ' , map({ "'-' $_" } @extraopts) );
  if($options{'3d'}) { print PIPE "splot $body\n"; }
  else               { print PIPE  "plot $body\n"; }

  foreach my $buf (@nonemptyCurves)
  {
    # send each point to gnuplot. Ignore the first "point" since it's the
    # curve options
    for my $elem (@{$buf}[1..$#$buf])
    {
      print PIPE "@$elem\n";
    }
    print PIPE "e\n";
  }
}

sub updateCurveOptions
{
  # generates the 'options' string for a curve, based on its legend title and its other options
  # These could be integrated into a single string, but that raises an issue in the no-title
  # case. When no title is specified, gnuplot will still add a legend entry with an unhelpful '-'
  # label. Thus I explicitly do 'notitle' for that case

  my ($curveoptions, $id) = @_;

  # use the given title, unless we're generating a legend automatically. Given titles
  # override autolegend
  my $title;
  if(defined $curveoptions->{title})
  { $title = $curveoptions->{title}; }
  elsif( $options{autolegend} )
  { $title = $id; }

  my $titleoption = defined $title ? "title \"$title\"" : "notitle";

  my $curvestyleall = '';
  $curvestyleall = $options{curvestyleall}
    if defined $options{curvestyleall} && !defined $options{curvestyle_hash}{$id};

  my $histoptions = $curveoptions->{histoptions} || '';

  $curveoptions->{options} = "$histoptions $titleoption $curveoptions->{extraoptions} $curvestyleall";
}

sub getCurve
{
  # This function returns the curve corresponding to a particular label, creating a new curve if
  # necessary

  if(scalar @curves >= $options{maxcurves})
  {
    print STDERR "Tried to exceed the --maxcurves setting.\n";
    print STDERR "Invoke with a higher --maxcurves limit if you really want to do this.\n";
    exit -1;
  }

  my ($id) = @_;

  if( !exists $curveIndices{$id} )
  {
    push @curves, [{extraoptions => ' '}]; # push a curve with no data and no options
    $curveIndices{$id} =  $#curves;

    updateCurveOptions($curves[$#curves][0], $id);
  }
  return $curves[$curveIndices{$id}];
}

sub addCurveOption
{
  my ($id, $str) = @_;

  my $curve = getCurve($id);
  $curve->[0]{extraoptions} .= "$str ";
  updateCurveOptions($curve->[0], $id);
}

sub setCurveLabel
{
  my ($id, $str) = @_;

  my $curve = getCurve($id);
  $curve->[0]{title} = $str;
  updateCurveOptions($curve->[0], $id);
}

sub setCurveAsHistogram
{
  my ($id, $str) = @_;

  my $curve = getCurve($id);
  $curve->[0]{histoptions} = 'using (histbin($2)):(1.0) smooth ' . $options{histstyle};

  updateCurveOptions($curve->[0], $id);
}

# remove all the curve data
sub clearCurves
{
  foreach my $curve(@curves)
  { splice( @$curve, 1 ); }
}

sub replot
{
  return unless $haveNewData;
  $haveNewData = undef;

  return if !$options{stream};


  # The logic involving domain rollover replotting due to --monotonic is a bit
  # tricky. I want this:

  # if( domain rolls over slowly )
  # {
  #   should update on a timer;
  #   when the domain rolls over, --monotonic should force a replot
  # }
  # if( domain rolls over quickly )
  # {
  #   should update when the domain rolls over,
  #     at most as quickly as the timer indicates
  # }


  my ($replot_is_from_timer) = @_;

  my $now = [gettimeofday];

  if( # If there is no replot timer at all, replot at any indication
      $options{stream} < 0 ||

      # if the last replot was timer-based, but this one isn't, force a replot.
      # This makes sure that a replot happens for a domain rollover shortly
      # after a timer replot
      !$replot_is_from_timer && $last_replot_is_from_timer ||

      # if enough time has elapsed since the last replot, it's ok to replot
      tv_interval ( $last_replot_time, $now ) > 0.8*$options{stream} )
  {
    # tests passed; do replot
    if ( $options{xlen} )
    {
      pruneOldData($domain[0] - $options{xlen});
      plotStoredData($domain[0] - $options{xlen}, $domain[0]);
    }
    else
    { plotStoredData(); }


    # update replot state
    $last_replot_time          = $now;
    $last_replot_is_from_timer = $replot_is_from_timer;
  }
}

# function to add a point to the plot. Assumes that the curve indexed by $idx already exists
sub pushPoint
{
  my ($curve, $xy) = @_;
  push @$curve, $xy;
  $haveNewData = 1;
}


=head1 NAME

feedgnuplot - General purpose pipe-oriented plotting tool

=head1 SYNOPSIS

Simple plotting of piped data:

 $ seq 5 | awk '{print 2*$1, $1*$1}'
 2 1
 4 4
 6 9
 8 16
 10 25

 $ seq 5 | awk '{print 2*$1, $1*$1}' |
   feedgnuplot --lines --points --legend 0 "data 0" --title "Test plot" --y2 1

Simple real-time plotting example: plot how much data is received on the wlan0
network interface in bytes/second (uses bash, awk and Linux):

 $ while true; do sleep 1; cat /proc/net/dev; done |
   gawk '/wlan0/ {if(b) {print $2-b; fflush()} b=$2}' |
   feedgnuplot --lines --stream --xlen 10 --ylabel 'Bytes/sec' --xlabel seconds

=head1 DESCRIPTION

This is a flexible, command-line-oriented frontend to Gnuplot. It creates
plots from data coming in on STDIN or given in a filename passed on the
commandline. Various data representations are supported, as is hardcopy
output and streaming display of live data. A simple example:

 $ seq 5 | awk '{print 2*$1, $1*$1}' | feedgnuplot

You should see a plot with two curves. The C<awk> command generates some data to
plot and the C<feedgnuplot> reads it in from STDIN and generates the plot. The
C<awk> invocation is just an example; more interesting things would be plotted
in normal usage. No commandline-options are required for the most basic
plotting. Input parsing is flexible; every line need not have the same number of
points. New curves will be created as needed.

The most commonly used functionality of gnuplot is supported directly by the
script. Anything not directly supported can still be done with the
C<--extracmds> and C<--curvestyle> options. Arbitrary gnuplot commands can be
passed in with C<--extracmds>. For example, to turn off the grid, pass in
C<--extracmds 'unset grid'>. As many of these options as needed can be passed
in. To add arbitrary curve styles, use C<--curvestyle curveID extrastyle>. Pass
these more than once to affect more than one curve. To apply an extra style to
I<all> the curves that lack an explicit C<--curvestyle>, pass in
C<--curvestyleall extrastyle>.

=head2 Data formats

By default, each value present in the incoming data represents a distinct data
point, as demonstrated in the original example above (we had 10 numbers in the
input and 10 points in the plot). If requested, the script supports more
sophisticated interpretation of input data

=head3 Domain selection

If C<--domain> is passed in, the first value on each line of input is
interpreted as the I<X>-value for the rest of the data on that line. Without
C<--domain> the I<X>-value is the line number, and the first value on a line is
a plain data point like the others. Default is C<--nodomain>. Thus the original
example above produces 2 curves, with B<1,2,3,4,5> as the I<X>-values. If we run
the same command with --domain:

 $ seq 5 | awk '{print 2*$1, $1*$1}' | feedgnuplot --domain

we get only 1 curve, with B<2,4,6,8,10> as the I<X>-values. As many points as
desired can appear on a single line, but all points on a line are associated
with the I<X>-value at the start of that line.

=head3 Curve indexing

By default, each column represents a separate curve. This is fine unless sparse
data is to be plotted. With the C<--dataid> option, each point is represented by
2 values: a string identifying the curve, and the value itself. If we add
C<--dataid> to the original example:

 $ seq 5 | awk '{print 2*$1, $1*$1}' | feedgnuplot --dataid --autolegend

we get 5 different curves with one point in each. The first column, as produced
by C<awk>, is B<2,4,6,8,10>. These are interpreted as the IDs of the curves to
be plotted. The C<--autolegend> option adds a legend using the given IDs to
label the curves. The IDs need not be numbers; generic strings are accepted. As
many points as desired can appear on a single line. C<--domain> can be used in
conjunction with C<--dataid>.

=head3 Multi-value style support

Depending on how gnuplot is plotting the data, more than one value may be needed
to represent a single point. For example, the script has support to plot all the
data with C<--circles>. This requires a radius to be specified for each point in
addition to the position of the point. Thus, when plotting with C<--circles>, 2
numbers are read for each data point instead of 1. A similar situation exists
with C<--colormap> where each point contains the position I<and> the
color. There are other gnuplot styles that require more data (such as error
bars), but none of these are directly supported by the script. They can still be
used, though, by specifying the specific style with C<--curvestyle>, and
specifying how many extra values are needed for each point with
C<--extraValuesPerPoint extra>. C<--extraValuesPerPoint> is ONLY needed for the
styles not explicitly supported; supported styles set that variable
automatically.

=head3 3D data

To plot 3D data, pass in C<--3d>. C<--domain> MUST be given when plotting 3D
data to avoid domain ambiguity. If 3D data is being plotted, there are by
definition 2 domain values instead of one (I<Z> as a function of I<X> and I<Y>
instead of I<Y> as a function of I<X>). Thus the first 2 values on each line are
interpreted as the domain instead of just 1. The rest of the processing happens
the same way as before.

=head3 Special data commands

Other than the raw data, 2 special commands are interpreted if they appear in
the input. These are C<replot> and C<clear>. If a line of data begins with
C<replot> and we're plotting in realtime with C<--stream>, the plot will be
refreshed immediately. If a line of data begins with C<clear>, the plot is
cleared, to be re-filled with any data following the C<clear>.

=head2 Real-time streaming data

To plot real-time data, pass in the C<--stream [refreshperiod]> option. Data
will then be plotted as it is received. The plot will be updated every
C<refreshperiod> seconds. If the period isn't specified, a 1Hz refresh rate is
used. To refresh at specific intervals indicated by the data, set the
refreshperiod to 0 or to 'trigger'. The plot will then I<only> be refreshed when
a data line 'replot' is received. This 'replot' command works in both triggered
and timed modes, but in triggered mode, it's the only way to replot.

To plot only the most recent data (instead of I<all> the data), C<--xlen
windowsize> can be given. This will create an constantly-updating, scrolling
view of the recent past. C<windowsize> should be replaced by the desired length
of the domain window to plot, in domain units (passed-in values if C<--domain>
or line numbers otherwise).

=head2 Hardcopy output

The script is able to produce hardcopy output with C<--hardcopy outputfile>. The
output type can be inferred from the filename, if B<.ps>, B<.eps>, B<.pdf>,
B<.svg> or B<.png> is requested. If any other file type is requested,
C<--terminal> I<must> be passed in to tell gnuplot how to make the plot.

=head2 Self-plotting data files

This script can be used to enable self-plotting data files. There are 2 ways of
doing this: with a shebang (#!) or with inline perl data.

=head3 Self-plotting data with a #!

A self-plotting, executable data file C<data> is formatted as

 $ cat data
 #!/usr/bin/feedgnuplot --lines --points
 2 1
 4 4
 6 9
 8 16
 10 25
 12 36
 14 49
 16 64
 18 81
 20 100
 22 121
 24 144
 26 169
 28 196
 30 225

This is the shebang (#!) line followed by the data, formatted as before. The
data file can be plotted simply with

 $ ./data

The caveats here are that on Linux the whole #! line is limited to 127 charaters
and that the full path to feedgnuplot must be given. The 127 character limit is
a serious limitation, but this can likely be resolved with a kernel patch. I
have only tried on Linux 2.6.

=head3 Self-plotting data with perl inline data

Perl supports storing data and code in the same file. This can also be used to
create self-plotting files:

 $ cat plotdata.pl
 #!/usr/bin/perl
 use strict;
 use warnings;

 open PLOT, "| feedgnuplot --lines --points" or die "Couldn't open plotting pipe";
 while( <DATA> )
 {
   my @xy = split;
   print PLOT "@xy\n";
 }
 __DATA__
 2 1
 4 4
 6 9
 8 16
 10 25
 12 36
 14 49
 16 64
 18 81
 20 100
 22 121
 24 144
 26 169
 28 196
 30 225

This is especially useful if the logged data is not in a format directly
supported by feedgnuplot. Raw data can be stored after the __DATA__ directive,
with a small perl script to manipulate the data into a useable format and send
it to the plotter.

=head1 ARGUMENTS

  --[no]domain         If enabled, the first element of each line is the
                       domain variable.  If not, the point index is used

  --[no]dataid         If enabled, each data point is preceded by the ID
                       of the data set that point corresponds to. This ID is
                       interpreted as a string, NOT as just a number. If not
                       enabled, the order of the point is used.

As an example, if line 3 of the input is "0 9 1 20"
 '--nodomain --nodataid' would parse the 4 numbers as points in 4
   different curves at x=3

 '--domain --nodataid' would parse the 4 numbers as points in 3 different
   curves at x=0. Here, 0 is the x-variable and 9,1,20 are the data values

 '--nodomain --dataid' would parse the 4 numbers as points in 2 different
   curves at x=3. Here 0 and 1 are the data IDs and 9 and 20 are the
   data values

 '--domain --dataid' would parse the 4 numbers as a single point at
   x=0. Here 9 is the data ID and 1 is the data value. 20 is an extra
   value, so it is ignored. If another value followed 20, we'd get another
   point in curve ID 20

  --[no]3d             Do [not] plot in 3D. This only makes sense with --domain.
                       Each domain here is an (x,y) tuple

  --colormap           Show a colormapped xy plot. Requires extra data for the color.
                       zmin/zmax can be used to set the extents of the colors.
                       Automatically increments extraValuesPerPoint

  --stream [period]    Plot the data as it comes in, in realtime. If period is given,
                       replot every period seconds. If no period is given, replot at
                       1Hz. If the period is given as 0 or 'trigger', replot ONLY when
                       the incoming data dictates this. See the "Real-time streaming
                       data" section of the man page.

  --[no]lines          Do [not] draw lines to connect consecutive points
  --[no]points         Do [not] draw points
  --circles            Plot with circles. This requires a radius be specified for
                       each point. Automatically increments extraValuesPerPoint

  --xlabel xxx         Set x-axis label
  --ylabel xxx         Set y-axis label
  --y2label xxx        Set y2-axis label. Does not apply to 3d plots
  --zlabel xxx         Set y-axis label. Only applies to 3d plots

  --title  xxx         Set the title of the plot

  --legend curveID legend
                       Set the label for a curve plot. Use this option multiple times
                       for multiple curves. With --dataid, curveID is the ID. Otherwise,
                       it's the index of the curve, starting at 0

  --autolegend         Use the curve IDs for the legend. Titles given with --legend
                       override these

  --xlen xxx           When using --stream, sets the size of the x-window to plot.
                       Omit this or set it to 0 to plot ALL the data. Does not
                       make sense with 3d plots. Implies --monotonic

  --xmin  xxx          Set the range for the x axis. These are ignored in a
                       streaming plot
  --xmax  xxx          Set the range for the x axis. These are ignored in a
                       streaming plot
  --ymin  xxx          Set the range for the y axis.
  --ymax  xxx          Set the range for the y axis.
  --y2min xxx          Set the range for the y2 axis. Does not apply to 3d plots.
  --y2max xxx          Set the range for the y2 axis. Does not apply to 3d plots.
  --zmin  xxx          Set the range for the z axis. Only applies to 3d plots or colormaps.
  --zmax  xxx          Set the range for the z axis. Only applies to 3d plots or colormaps.

  --y2    xxx          Plot the data specified by this curve ID on the y2 axis.
                       Without --dataid, the ID is just an ordered 0-based index.
                       Does not apply to 3d plots. Can be passed multiple times, or passed a
                       comma-separated list

  --histogram  curveID
                       Set up a this specific curve to plot a histogram. The bin
                       width is given with the --binwidth option (assumed 1.0 if
                       omitted). --histogram does NOT touch the drawing style.
                       It is often desired to plot these with boxes, and this
                       MUST be explicitly requested with --curvestyleall 'with
                       boxes'. This works with --domain and/or --stream, but in
                       those cases the x-value is used ONLY to cull old data
                       because of --xlen or --monotonic. I.e. the x-values are
                       NOT drawn in any way. Can be passed multiple times, or passed a comma-
                       separated list
  --binwidth width     The width of bins when making histograms. This setting applies to ALL
                       histograms in the plot. Defaults to 1.0 if not given.
  --histstyle style    Normally, histograms are generated with the 'smooth freq'
                       gnuplot style. --histstyle can be used to select
                       different 'smooth' settings. Allowed are 'unique',
                       'cumulative' and 'cnormal'. 'unique' indicates whether a
                       bin has at least one item in it: instead of counting the
                       items, it'll always report 0 or 1. 'cumulative' is the
                       integral of the "normal" histogram. 'cnormal' is like
                       'cumulative', but rescaled to end up at 1.0.

  --curvestyle curveID style
                       Additional styles per curve. With --dataid, curveID is
                       the ID. Otherwise, it's the index of the curve, starting
                       at 0. Use this option multiple times for multiple curves.
                       --curvestylall does NOT apply to curves that have a
                       --curvestyle

  --curvestyleall xxx  Additional styles for all curves that have no --curvestyle

  --extracmds xxx      Additional commands. These could contain extra global styles
                       for instance. Can be passed multiple times.

  --square             Plot data with aspect ratio 1. For 3D plots, this controls the
                       aspect ratio for all 3 axes

  --square_xy          For 3D plots, set square aspect ratio for ONLY the x,y axes

  --hardcopy xxx       If not streaming, output to a file specified here. Format
                       inferred from filename, unless specified by --terminal
  --terminal xxx       String passed to 'set terminal'. No attempts are made to
                       validate this. --hardcopy sets this to some sensible
                       defaults if --hardcopy is given .png, .pdf, .ps, .eps or
                       .svg. If any other file type is desired, use both
                       --hardcopy and --terminal

  --maxcurves xxx      The maximum allowed number of curves. This is 100 by default,
                       but can be reset with this option. This exists purely to
                       prevent perl from allocating all of the system's memory when
                       reading bogus data

  --monotonic          If --domain is given, checks to make sure that the x-
                       coordinate in the input data is monotonically increasing.
                       If a given x-variable is in the past, all data currently
                       cached for this curve is purged. Without --monotonic, all
                       data is kept. Does not make sense with 3d plots.
                       No --monotonic by default. The data is replotted before being
                       purged

  --extraValuesPerPoint xxx
                       How many extra values are given for each data point. Normally this
                       is 0, and does not need to be specified, but sometimes we want
                       extra data, like for colors or point sizes or error bars, etc.
                       feedgnuplot options that require this (colormap, circles)
                       automatically set it. This option is ONLY needed if unknown styles are
                       used, with --curvestyleall for instance

  --dump               Instead of printing to gnuplot, print to STDOUT. Very useful for
                       debugging. It is possible to send the output produced this way to
                       gnuplot directly.

  --geometry           If using X11, specifies the size, position of the plot window

  --version            Print the version and exit

=head1 RECIPES

=head2 Basic plotting of piped data

 $ seq 5 | awk '{print 2*$1, $1*$1}'
 2 1
 4 4
 6 9
 8 16
 10 25

 $ seq 5 | awk '{print 2*$1, $1*$1}' |
   feedgnuplot --lines --points --legend 0 "data 0" --title "Test plot" --y2 1

=head2 Realtime plot of network throughput

Looks at wlan0 on Linux.

 $ while true; do sleep 1; cat /proc/net/dev; done |
   gawk '/wlan0/ {if(b) {print $2-b; fflush()} b=$2}' |
   feedgnuplot --lines --stream --xlen 10 --ylabel 'Bytes/sec' --xlabel seconds

=head2 Realtime plot of battery charge

Uses the result of the C<acpi> command.

 $ while true; do acpi; sleep 15; done |
   perl -nE 'BEGIN{ $| = 1; } /([0-9]*)%/; say join(" ", $./4, $1);' |
   feedgnuplot --stream --ymin 0 --ymax 100 --domain --xlabel 'Time (seconds)' --ylabel "Battery charge (%)"

=head2 Realtime plot of temperatures in an IBM Thinkpad

Uses C</proc/acpi/ibm/thermal>, which reports temperatures at various locations
in a Thinkpad.

 $ while true; do cat /proc/acpi/ibm/thermal | awk '{$1=""; print}' ; sleep 1; done |
   feedgnuplot --stream --xlen 100 --lines --autolegend --ymax 100 --ymin 20 --ylabel 'Temperature (deg C)'

=head2 Plotting a histogram of file sizes in a directory

 $ ls -l | awk '{print $5/1e6}' |
   feedgnuplot --histogram 0 --curvestyleall 'with boxes' --ymin 0 --xlabel 'File size (MB)' --ylabel Frequency

=head1 ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

This program is originally based on the driveGnuPlots.pl script from
Thanassis Tsiodras. It is available from his site at
L<http://users.softlab.ece.ntua.gr/~ttsiod/gnuplotStreaming.html>

=head1 REPOSITORY

L<https://github.com/dkogan/feedgnuplot>

=head1 AUTHOR

Dima Kogan, C<< <[email protected]> >>

=head1 LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT

Copyright 2011-2012 Dima Kogan.

This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the terms of either: the GNU General Public License as published
by the Free Software Foundation; or the Artistic License.

See http://dev.perl.org/licenses/ for more information.

=cut

feedgnuplot's People

Contributors

dkogan avatar hfs avatar

Watchers

 avatar  avatar  avatar

Recommend Projects

  • React photo React

    A declarative, efficient, and flexible JavaScript library for building user interfaces.

  • Vue.js photo Vue.js

    ๐Ÿ–– Vue.js is a progressive, incrementally-adoptable JavaScript framework for building UI on the web.

  • Typescript photo Typescript

    TypeScript is a superset of JavaScript that compiles to clean JavaScript output.

  • TensorFlow photo TensorFlow

    An Open Source Machine Learning Framework for Everyone

  • Django photo Django

    The Web framework for perfectionists with deadlines.

  • D3 photo D3

    Bring data to life with SVG, Canvas and HTML. ๐Ÿ“Š๐Ÿ“ˆ๐ŸŽ‰

Recommend Topics

  • javascript

    JavaScript (JS) is a lightweight interpreted programming language with first-class functions.

  • web

    Some thing interesting about web. New door for the world.

  • server

    A server is a program made to process requests and deliver data to clients.

  • Machine learning

    Machine learning is a way of modeling and interpreting data that allows a piece of software to respond intelligently.

  • Game

    Some thing interesting about game, make everyone happy.

Recommend Org

  • Facebook photo Facebook

    We are working to build community through open source technology. NB: members must have two-factor auth.

  • Microsoft photo Microsoft

    Open source projects and samples from Microsoft.

  • Google photo Google

    Google โค๏ธ Open Source for everyone.

  • D3 photo D3

    Data-Driven Documents codes.