I'm relatively new to shell programming and would like to know if there is a simple way to output the results of the sar
command to a csv
file. Using sar > file1.csv
does the job, but it is not properly formatted. All the data is present in one column. I tried this, but it was worse
sar -d -u -w 1 1 | grep -v Average | grep -v Linux | tr -s ' ' ',' | tr -d '\n' > file1.csv
Can anyone give me the right script to store the output of the sar
command in a csv
file. Help will be appreciated.
sar -d -u -w 1 1 | grep -v Average | grep -v Linux |awk '{if ($0 ~ /[0-9]/) { print $1","$2","$4","$5","$6; } }'
22:14:04,CPU,%nice,%system,%iowait
22:14:05,all,0.00,8.53,0.00
22:14:04,proc/s,,,
22:14:05,0.00,,,
22:14:04,DEV,rd_sec/s,wr_sec/s,avgrq-sz
22:14:05,dev8-0,0.00,0.00,0.00
outputs above enjoy
I know this is kind of old but you should, or could, use sadf -dh -- <sar command>
. It is part of the sysstat package and it will give you the csv output without any need for awk
and regex. Actually, the latest versions are also able to output the info to JSON and XML. You can just pick your poison :)
Simple example:
[local@localhost dir]$ sadf -dh -- -p
localhost.localdomain;-1;2014-06-13 08:47:02 UTC;LINUX-RESTART
# hostname;interval;timestamp;CPU;%user;%nice;%system;%iowait;%steal;%idle[...]
localhost.localdomain;600;2014-06-13 09:00:01 UTC;-1;8.80;0.01;1.65;9.51;0.00;80.03
localhost.localdomain;600;2014-06-13 09:10:01 UTC;-1;3.03;0.71;2.41;0.81;0.00;93.05