This topic describes how to use OceanBase Diagnostic Tool (obdiag) that is independently deployed to display the information about the disk usage of the specified table in the specified database.
Syntax
obdiag display scene run --scene=observer.table_datasize [options]
The following table describes the options.
| Option | Required | Data type | Default value | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| -c | No | string | ~/.obdiag/config.yml |
The path of the configuration file. |
| --inner_config | No | string | Empty | The configurations of obdiag. |
| --config | No | string | Empty | The configurations of the cluster diagnosed by obdiag, in the format of --config key1=value1 --config key2=value2.
NoteFor information about the parameters supported by this option, see Configure obdiag. |
| --env | No | string | Empty | Additional parameters required for the obdiag display command, in the format of --env tenant_id=1 --env database_name=test --env table_name=test. |
Examples
Method 1: Use the command out-of-the-box without a configuration file
obdiag display scene run --scene=observer.table_datasize --env tenant_id=1 --env database_name=test --env table_name=test \
--config db_host=xx.xx.xx.xx \
--config db_port=xxxx \
--config tenant_sys.user=root@sys \
--config tenant_sys.password=***
Method 2: Use the command with a configuration file
Before you use this command, make sure that you have configured the login information of the target nodes in the config.yml configuration file of obdiag. For more information, see Configure obdiag.
obdiag display scene run --scene=observer.table_datasize --env tenant_id=1 --env database_name=test --env table_name=test