Book Image

Plone 3.3 Site Administration

Book Image

Plone 3.3 Site Administration

Overview of this book

In the past few years, we have seen some dramatic changes in the way Plone sites are being developed, deployed, and maintained. As a result, developing and deploying sites, changing their default settings, and performing day to day maintenance tasks can be a challenge. This book covers site administration tasks, from setting up a development instance, to optimizing a deployed production site, and more. It demonstrates how-to perform these tasks in a comprehensive way, and walks the user through the necessary steps to achieve results.We have divided the subject of Plone site administration into three categories: development, deployment, and maintenance. We begin by explaining how a Plone site is built, and how to start using it through the web. Next, we add features by installing add-on products, focusing on themes, blogging, and other common enhancements. After the basics of developing and deploying a Plone site are covered, the book covers the basics of maintaining it.Further, throughout the book we preview some new technologies related to Plone site administration, available now as add-ons to the current Plone release. Finally, we will cover a variety of techniques to help you optimize your site's performance.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
Plone 3.3 Site Administration
Credits
Foreword
About the Author
About the Reviewer
Preface
Index

Installing Munin plugins to analyze performance


As we mentioned earlier, Munin produces graphs that contain diagnostic system information.

With Zope 2, you can analyze four different parameters over time:

  • Memory

  • Cache

  • Threads

  • ZODB

To create graphs with Munin, you must install the Munin plugins in Zope 2 as well as install the Munin software on your production server (that is, outside the buildout).

Munin installation should be fairly trivial on most UNIX-like operating systems, including our target operating system Ubuntu Linux. Munin software is typically bundled into three separate packages—munin, munin-node, and munin-plugins.

Assuming you have one server, you should have at least the munin and munin-node packages installed to facilitate monitoring of that server and the Plone site running on it.

If you have more than one server (running Plone), you should add munin-nodes to each additional server and configure them to be nodes of the server with the munin package installed.

To install the Munin...