This function works the same as `timestamp()`, but doesn't remove source time series names. See https://github.com/VictoriaMetrics/VictoriaMetrics/issues/949#issuecomment-995222388
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MetricsQL
VictoriaMetrics implements MetricsQL - query language inspired by PromQL. MetricsQL is backwards-compatible with PromQL, so Grafana dashboards backed by Prometheus datasource should work the same after switching from Prometheus to VictoriaMetrics. However, there are some intentional differences between these two languages.
Standalone MetricsQL package can be used for parsing MetricsQL in external apps.
If you are unfamiliar with PromQL, then it is suggested reading this tutorial for beginners.
The following functionality is implemented differently in MetricsQL compared to PromQL. This improves user experience:
- MetricsQL takes into account the previous point before the window in square brackets for range functions such as rate and increase. This allows returning the exact results users expect for
increase(metric[$__interval])
queries instead of incomplete results Prometheus returns for such queries. - MetricsQL doesn't extrapolate range function results. This addresses this issue from Prometheus. See technical details about VictoriaMetrics and Prometheus calculations for rate and increase in this issue.
- MetricsQL returns the expected non-empty responses for rate with
step
values smaller than scrape interval. This addresses this issue from Grafana. See also this blog post. - MetricsQL treats
scalar
type the same asinstant vector
without labels, since subtle differences between these types usually confuse users. See the corresponding Prometheus docs for details. - MetricsQL removes all the
NaN
values from the output, so some queries like(-1)^0.5
return empty results in VictoriaMetrics, while returning a series ofNaN
values in Prometheus. Note that Grafana doesn't draw any lines or dots forNaN
values, so the end result looks the same for both VictoriaMetrics and Prometheus. - MetricsQL keeps metric names after applying functions, which don't change the meaning of the original time series. For example, min_over_time(foo) or round(foo) leaves
foo
metric name in the result. See this issue for details.
Read more about the diffferences between PromQL and MetricsQL in this article.
Other PromQL functionality should work the same in MetricsQL. File an issue if you notice discrepancies between PromQL and MetricsQL results other than mentioned above.
MetricsQL features
MetricsQL implements PromQL and provides additional functionality mentioned below, which is aimed towards solving practical cases. Feel free filing a feature request if you think MetricsQL misses certain useful functionality.
This functionality can be evaluated at an editable Grafana dashboard or at your own VictoriaMetrics instance.
- Graphite-compatible filters can be passed via
{__graphite__="foo.*.bar"}
syntax. See these docs. VictoriaMetrics also can be used as Graphite datasource in Grafana. See these docs for details. See also label_graphite_group function, which can be used for extracting the given groups from Graphite metric name. - Lookbehind window in square brackets may be omitted. VictoriaMetrics automatically selects the lookbehind window depending on the current step used for building the graph (e.g.
step
query arg passed to /api/v1/query_range). For instance, the following query is valid in VictoriaMetrics:rate(node_network_receive_bytes_total)
. It is equivalent torate(node_network_receive_bytes_total[$__interval])
when used in Grafana. - Aggregate functions accept arbitrary number of args. For example,
avg(q1, q2, q3)
would return the average values for every point across time series returned byq1
,q2
andq3
. - offset, lookbehind window in square brackets and
step
value for subquery may refer to the current step aka$__interval
value from Grafana with[Ni]
syntax. For instance,rate(metric[10i] offset 5i)
would return per-second rate over a range covering 10 previous steps with the offset of 5 steps. - offset may be put anywere in the query. For instance,
sum(foo) offset 24h
. - offset may be negative. For example,
q offset -1h
. - Lookbehind window in square brackets and offset may be fractional. For instance,
rate(node_network_receive_bytes_total[1.5m] offset 0.5d)
. - The duration suffix is optional. The duration is in seconds if the suffix is missing. For example,
rate(m[300] offset 1800)
is equivalent torate(m[5m]) offset 30m
. - The duration can be placed anywhere in the query. For example,
sum_over_time(m[1h]) / 1h
is equivalent tosum_over_time(m[1h]) / 3600
. - Trailing commas on all the lists are allowed - label filters, function args and with expressions. For instance, the following queries are valid:
m{foo="bar",}
,f(a, b,)
,WITH (x=y,) x
. This simplifies maintenance of multi-line queries. - Metric names and metric labels may contain escaped chars. For instance,
foo\-bar{baz\=aa="b"}
is valid expression. It returns time series with namefoo-bar
containing labelbaz=aa
with valueb
. Additionally,\xXX
escape sequence is supported, whereXX
is hexadecimal representation of escaped char. - Aggregate functions support optional
limit N
suffix in order to limit the number of output series. For example,sum(x) by (y) limit 3
limits the number of output time series after the aggregation to 3. All the other time series are dropped. - histogram_quantile accepts optional third arg -
boundsLabel
. In this case it returnslower
andupper
bounds for the estimated percentile. See this issue for details. default
binary operator.q1 default q2
fills gaps inq1
with the corresponding values fromq2
.if
binary operator.q1 if q2
removes values fromq1
for missing values fromq2
.ifnot
binary operator.q1 ifnot q2
removes values fromq1
for existing values fromq2
.- String literals may be concatenated. This is useful with
WITH
templates:WITH (commonPrefix="long_metric_prefix_") {__name__=commonPrefix+"suffix1"} / {__name__=commonPrefix+"suffix2"}
. WITH
templates. This feature simplifies writing and managing complex queries. Go to WITH templates playground and try it.
MetricsQL functions
If you are unfamiliar with PromQL, then please read this tutorial at first.
MetricsQL provides the following functions:
Rollup functions
Rollup functions (aka range functions or window functions) calculate rollups over raw samples on the given lookbehind window for the selected time series. For example, avg_over_time(temperature[24h])
calculates the average temperature over raw samples for the last 24 hours. Additional details:
- If rollup functions are used for building graphs in Grafana, then the rollup is calculated independently per each point on the graph. For example, every point for
avg_over_time(temperature[24h])
graph shows the average temperature for the last 24 hours ending at this point. The interval between points is set asstep
query arg passed by Grafana to /api/v1/query_range. - If the given series selector returns multiple time series, then rollups are calculated individually per each returned series.
- If lookbehind window in square brackets is missing, then MetricsQL automatically sets the lookbehind window to the interval between points on the graph (aka
step
query arg at /api/v1/query_range,$__interval
value from Grafana or1i
duration in MetricsQL). For example,rate(http_requests_total)
is equivalent torate(http_requests_total[$__interval])
in Grafana. It is also equivalent torate(http_requests_total[1i])
. - Every series selector in MetricsQL must be wrapped into a rollup function. Otherwise it is automatically wrapped into default_rollup. For example,
foo{bar="baz"}
is automatically converted todefault_rollup(foo{bar="baz"}[1i])
before performing the calculations. - If something other than series selector is passed to rollup function, then the inner arg is automatically converted to a subquery.
See also implicit query conversions.
absent_over_time
absent_over_time(series_selector[d])
returns 1 if the given lookbehind window d
doesn't contain raw samples. Otherwise it returns an empty result. This function is supported by PromQL. See also present_over_time.
aggr_over_time
aggr_over_time(("rollup_func1", "rollup_func2", ...), series_selector[d])
calculates all the listed rollup_func*
for raw samples on the given lookbehind window d
. The calculations are perfomed individually per each time series returned from the given series_selector. rollup_func*
can contain any rollup function. For instance, aggr_over_time(("min_over_time", "max_over_time", "rate"), m[d])
would calculate min_over_time, max_over_time and rate for m[d]
.
ascent_over_time
ascent_over_time(series_selector[d])
calculates ascent of raw sample values on the given lookbehind window d
. The calculations are performed individually per each time series returned from the given series_selector. Useful for tracking height gains in GPS tracking. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups. See also descent_over_time.
avg_over_time
avg_over_time(series_selector[d])
calculates the average value over raw samples on the given lookbehind window d
per each time series returned from the given series_selector. This function is supported by PromQL. See also median_over_time.
changes
changes(series_selector[d])
calculates the number of times the raw samples changed on the given lookbehind window d
per each time series returned from the given series_selector. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups. This function is supported by PromQL.
count_eq_over_time
count_eq_over_time(series_selector[d], eq)
calculates the number of raw samples on the given lookbehind window d
, which are equal to eq
. It is calculated independently per each time series returned from the given series_selector. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups. See also count_over_time.
count_gt_over_time
count_gt_over_time(series_selector[d], gt)
calculates the number of raw samples on the given lookbehind window d
, which are bigger than gt
. It is calculated independently per each time series returned from the given series_selector. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups. See also count_over_time.
count_le_over_time
count_le_over_time(series_selector[d], le)
calculates the number of raw samples on the given lookbehind window d
, which don't exceed le
. It is calculated independently per each time series returned from the given series_selector. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups. See also count_over_time.
count_ne_over_time
count_ne_over_time(series_selector[d], ne)
calculates the number of raw samples on the given lookbehind window d
, which aren't equal to ne
. It is calculated independently per each time series returned from the given series_selector. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups. See also count_over_time.
count_over_time
count_over_time(series_selector[d])
calculates the number of raw samples on the given lookbehind window d
per each time series returned from the given series_selector. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups. This function is supported by PromQL. See also count_le_over_time, count_gt_over_time, count_eq_over_time and count_ne_over_time.
decreases_over_time
decreases_over_time(series_selector[d])
calculates the number of raw sample value decreases over the given lookbehind window d
per each time series returned from the given series_selector. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups. See also increases_over_time.
default_rollup
default_rollup(series_selector[d])
returns the last raw sample value on the given lookbehind window d
per each time series returned from the given series_selector.
delta
delta(series_selector[d])
calculates the difference between the first and the last point over the given lookbehind window d
per each time series returned from the given series_selector. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups. This function is supported by PromQL. See also increase.
deriv
deriv(series_selector[d])
calculates per-second derivative over the given lookbehind window d
per each time series returned from the given series_selector. The derivative is calculated using linear regression. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups. This function is supported by PromQL. See also deriv_fast and ideriv.
deriv_fast
deriv_fast(series_selector[d])
calculates per-second derivative using the first and the last raw samples on the given lookbehind window d
per each time series returned from the given series_selector. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups. See also deriv and ideriv.
descent_over_time
descent_over_time(series_selector[d])
calculates descent of raw sample values on the given lookbehind window d
. The calculations are performed individually per each time series returned from the given series_selector. Useful for tracking height loss in GPS tracking. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups. See also ascent_over_time.
distinct_over_time
distinct_over_time(series_selector[d])
returns the number of distinct raw sample values on the given lookbehind window d
per each time series returned from the given series_selector. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups.
duration_over_time
duration_over_time(series_selector[d], max_interval)
returns the duration in seconds when time series returned from the given series_selector were present over the given lookbehind window d
. It is expected that intervals between adjacent samples per each series don't exceed the max_interval
. Otherwise such intervals are considered as gaps and aren't counted. See also lifetime and lag.
first_over_time
first_over_time(series_selector[d])
returns the first raw sample value on the given lookbehind window d
per each time series returned from the given series_selector. See also last_over_time and tfirst_over_time.
geomean_over_time
geomean_over_time(series_selector[d])
calculates geometric mean over raw samples on the given lookbehind window d
per each time series returned from the given series_selector. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups.
histogram_over_time
histogram_over_time(series_selector[d])
calculates VictoriaMetrics histogram over raw samples on the given lookbehind window d
. It is calculated individually per each time series returned from the given series_selector. The resulting histograms are useful to pass to histogram_quantile for calculating quantiles over multiple gauges. For example, the following query calculates median temperature by country over the last 24 hours: histogram_quantile(0.5, sum(histogram_over_time(temperature[24h])) by (vmrange,country))
.
hoeffding_bound_lower
hoeffding_bound_lower(phi, series_selector[d])
calculates lower Hoeffding bound for the given phi
in the range [0...1]
. See also hoeffding_bound_upper.
hoeffding_bound_upper
hoeffding_bound_upper(phi, series_selector[d])
calculates upper Hoeffding bound for the given phi
in the range [0...1]
. See also hoeffding_bound_lower.
holt_winters
holt_winters(series_selector[d], sf, tf)
calculates Holt-Winters value (aka double exponential smoothing) for raw samples over the given lookbehind window d
using the given smoothing factor sf
and the given trend factor tf
. Both sf
and tf
must be in the range [0...1]
. It is expected that the series_selector returns time series of gauge type. This function is supported by PromQL.
idelta
idelta(series_selector[d])
calculates the difference between the last two raw samples on the given lookbehind window d
per each time series returned from the given series_selector. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups. This function is supported by PromQL.
ideriv
ideriv(series_selector[d])
calculates the per-second derivative based on the last two raw samples over the given lookbehind window d
. The derivative is calculated independently per each time series returned from the given series_selector. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups. See also deriv.
increase
increase(series_selector[d])
calculates the increase over the given lookbehind window d
per each time series returned from the given series_selector. It is expected that the series_selector
returns time series of counter type. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups. This function is supported by PromQL. See also increase_pure and delta.
increase_pure
increase_pure(series_selector[d])
works the same as increase except of the following corner case - it assumes that counters always start from 0, while increase ignores the first value in a series if it is too big.
increases_over_time
increases_over_time(series_selector[d])
calculates the number of raw sample value increases over the given lookbehind window d
per each time series returned from the given series_selector. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups. See also decreases_over_time.
integrate
integrate(series_selector[d])
calculates the integral over raw samples on the given lookbehind window d
per each time series returned from the given series_selector. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups.
irate
irate(series_selector[d])
calculates the "instant" per-second increase rate over the last two raw samples on the given lookbehind window d
per each time series returned from the given series_selector. It is expected that the series_selector
returns time series of counter type. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups. This function is supported by PromQL. See also rate.
lag
lag(series_selector[d])
returns the duration in seconds between the last sample on the given lookbehind window d
and the timestamp of the current point. It is calculated independently per each time series returned from the given series_selector. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups. See also lifetime and duration_over_time.
last_over_time
last_over_time(series_selector[d])
returns the last raw sample value on the given lookbehind window d
per each time series returned from the given series_selector. This function is supported by PromQL. See also first_over_time and tlast_over_time.
lifetime
lifetime(series_selector[d])
returns the duration in seconds between the last and the first sample on the given lookbehind window d
per each time series returned from the given series_selector. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups. See also duration_over_time and lag.
max_over_time
max_over_time(series_selector[d])
calculates the maximum value over raw samples on the given lookbehind window d
per each time series returned from the given series_selector. This function is supported by PromQL. See also tmax_over_time.
median_over_time
median_over_time(series_selector[d])
calculates median value over raw samples on the given lookbehind window d
per each time series returned from the given series_selector. See also avg_over_time.
min_over_time
min_over_time(series_selector[d])
calculates the minimum value over raw samples on the given lookbehind window d
per each time series returned from the given series_selector. This function is supported by PromQL. See also tmin_over_time.
mode_over_time
mode_over_time(series_selector[d])
calculates mode for raw samples on the given lookbehind window d
. It is calculated individually per each time series returned from the given series_selector. It is expected that raw sample values are discrete.
predict_linear
predict_linear(series_selector[d], t)
calculates the value t
seconds in the future using linear interpolation over raw samples on the given lookbehind window d
. The predicted value is calculated individually per each time series returned from the given series_selector. This function is supported by PromQL.
present_over_time
present_over_time(series_selector[d])
returns 1 if there is at least a single raw sample on the given lookbehind window d
. Otherwise an empty result is returned. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups. This function is supported by PromQL.
quantile_over_time
quantile_over_time(phi, series_selector[d])
calculates phi
-quantile over raw samples on the given lookbehind window d
per each time series returned from the given series_selector. The phi
value must be in the range [0...1]
. This function is supported by PromQL. See also quantiles_over_time.
quantiles_over_time
quantiles_over_time("phiLabel", phi1, ..., phiN, series_selector[d])
calculates phi*
-quantiles over raw samples on the given lookbehind window d
per each time series returned from the given series_selector. The function returns individual series per each phi*
with {phiLabel="phi*"}
label. phi*
values must be in the range [0...1]
. See also quantile_over_time.
range_over_time
range_over_time(series_selector[d])
calculates value range over raw samples on the given lookbehind window d
per each time series returned from the given series_selector. E.g. it calculates max_over_time(series_selector[d]) - min_over_time(series_selector[d])
. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups.
rate
rate(series_selector[d])
calculates the average per-second increase rate over the given lookbehind window d
per each time series returned from the given series_selector. It is expected that the series_selector
returns time series of counter type. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups. This function is supported by PromQL.
rate_over_sum
rate_over_sum(series_selector[d])
calculates per-second rate over the sum of raw samples on the given lookbehind window d
. The calculations are performed indiviually per each time series returned from the given series_selector. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups.
resets
resets(series_selector[d])
returns the number of counter resets over the given lookbehind window d
per each time series returned from the given series_selector. It is expected that the series_selector
returns time series of counter type. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups. This function is supported by PromQL.
rollup
rollup(series_selector[d])
calculates min
, max
and avg
values for raw samples on the given lookbehind window d
. These values are calculated individually per each time series returned from the given series_selector.
rollup_candlestick
rollup_candlestick(series_selector[d])
calculates open
, high
, low
and close
values (aka OHLC) over raw samples on the given lookbehind window d
. The calculations are perfomed individually per each time series returned from the given series_selector. This function is useful for financial applications.
rollup_delta
rollup_delta(series_selector[d])
calculates differences between adjancent raw samples on the given lookbehind window d
and returns min
, max
and avg
values for the calculated differences. The calculations are performed individually per each time series returned from the given series_selector. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups. See also rollup_increase.
rollup_deriv
rollup_deriv(series_selector[d])
calculates per-second derivatives for adjancent raw samples on the given lookbehind window d
and returns min
, max
and avg
values for the calculated per-second derivatives. The calculations are performed individually per each time series returned from the given series_selector. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups.
rollup_increase
rollup_increase(series_selector[d])
calculates increases for adjancent raw samples on the given lookbehind window d
and returns min
, max
and avg
values for the calculated increases. The calculations are performed individually per each time series returned from the given series_selector. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups. See also rollup_delta.
rollup_rate
rollup_rate(series_selector[d])
calculates per-second change rates for adjancent raw samples on the given lookbehind window d
and returns min
, max
and avg
values for the calculated per-second change rates. The calculations are perfomed individually per each time series returned from the given series_selector. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups.
rollup_scrape_interval
rollup_scrape_interval(series_selector[d])
calculates the interval in seconds between adjancent raw samples on the given lookbehind window d
and returns min
, max
and avg
values for the calculated interval. The calculations are perfomed individually per each time series returned from the given series_selector. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups. See also scrape_interval.
scrape_interval
scrape_interval(series_selector[d])
calculates the average interval in seconds between raw samples on the given lookbehind window d
per each time series returned from the given series_selector. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups. See also rollup_scrape_interval.
share_gt_over_time
share_gt_over_time(series_selector[d], gt)
returns share (in the range [0...1]
) of raw samples on the given lookbehind window d
, which are bigger than gt
. It is calculated independently per each time series returned from the given series_selector. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups. Useful for calculating SLI and SLO. Example: share_gt_over_time(up[24h], 0)
- returns service availability for the last 24 hours. See also share_le_over_time.
share_le_over_time
share_le_over_time(series_selector[d], le)
returns share (in the range [0...1]
) of raw samples on the given lookbehind window d
, which are smaller or equal to le
. It is calculated independently per each time series returned from the given series_selector. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups. Useful for calculating SLI and SLO. Example: share_le_over_time(memory_usage_bytes[24h], 100*1024*1024)
returns the share of time series values for the last 24 hours when memory usage was below or equal to 100MB. See also share_gt_over_time.
stddev_over_time
stddev_over_time(series_selector[d])
calculates standard deviation over raw samples on the given lookbehind window d
per each time series returned from the given series_selector. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups. This function is supported by PromQL. See also stdvar_over_time.
stdvar_over_time
stdvar_over_time(series_selector[d])
calculates stadnard variance over raw samples on the given lookbheind window d
per each time series returned from the given series_selector. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups. This function is supported by PromQL. See also stddev_over_time.
sum_over_time
sum_over_time(series_selector[d])
calculates the sum of raw sample values on the given lookbehind window d
per each time series returned from the given series_selector. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups. This function is supported by PromQL.
sum2_over_time
sum2_over_time(series_selector[d])
calculates the sum of squares for raw sample values on the given lookbehind window d
per each time series returned from the given series_selector. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups.
timestamp
timestamp(series_selector[d])
returns the timestamp in seconds for the last raw sample on the given lookbehind window d
per each time series returned from the given series_selector. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups. This function is supported by PromQL. See also timestamp_with_name.
timestamp_with_name
timestamp_with_name(series_selector[d])
returns the timestamp in seconds for the last raw sample on the given lookbehind window d
per each time series returned from the given series_selector. Metric names are preserved in the resulting rollups. See also timestamp.
tfirst_over_time
tfirst_over_time(series_selector[d])
returns the timestamp in seconds for the first raw sample on the given lookbehind window d
per each time series returned from the given series_selector. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups. See also first_over_time.
tlast_over_time
tlast_over_time(series_selector[d])
is an alias for timestamp.
tmax_over_time
tmax_over_time(series_selector[d])
returns the timestamp in seconds for the raw sample with the maximum value on the given lookbehind window d
. It is calculated independently per each time series returned from the given series_selector. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups. See also max_over_time.
tmin_over_time
tmin_over_time(series_selector[d])
returns the timestamp in seconds for the raw sample with the minimum value on the given lookbehind window d
. It is calculated independently per each time series returned from the given series_selector. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups. See also min_over_time.
zscore_over_time
zscore_over_time(series_selector[d])
calculates returns z-score for raw samples on the given lookbehind window d
. It is calculated independently per each time series returned from the given series_selector. Metric names are stripped from the resulting rollups.
Transform functions
Transform functions calculate transformations over rollup results. For example, abs(delta(temperature[24h]))
calculates the absolute value for every point of every time series returned from the rollup delta(temperature[24h])
. Additional details:
- If transform function is applied directly to a series selector, then the default_rollup() function is automatically applied before calculating the transformations. For example,
abs(temperature)
is implicitly transformed toabs(default_rollup(temperature[1i]))
.
See also implicit query conversions.
abs
abs(q)
calculates the absolute value for every point of every time series returned by q
. This function is supported by PromQL.
absent
absent(q)
returns 1 if q
has no points. Otherwise returns an empty result. This function is supported by PromQL.
acos
acos(q)
returns inverse cosine for every point of every time series returned by q
. Metric names are stripped from the resulting series. This function is supported by PromQL. See also asin and cos.
acosh
acosh(q)
returns inverse hyperbolic cosine for every point of every time series returned by q
. Metric names are stripped from the resulting series. This function is supported by PromQL. See also sinh.
asin
asin(q)
returns inverse sine for every point of every time series returned by q
. Metric names are stripped from the resulting series. This function is supported by PromQL. See also acos and sin.
asinh
asinh(q)
returns inverse hyperbolic sine for every point of every time series returned by q
. Metric names are stripped from the resulting series. This function is supported by PromQL. See also sinh.
atan
atan(q)
returns inverse tangent for every point of every time series returned by q
. Metric names are stripped from the resulting series. This function is supported by PromQL. See also tan.
atanh
atanh(q)
returns inverse hyperbolic tangent for every point of every time series returned by q
. Metric names are stripped from the resulting series. This function is supported by PromQL. See also tanh.
bitmap_and
bitmap_and(q, mask)
- calculates bitwise v & mask
for every v
point of every time series returned from q
. Metric names are stripped from the resulting series.
bitmap_or
bitmap_or(q, mask)
calculates bitwise v | mask
for every v
point of every time series returned from q
. Metric names are stripped from the resulting series.
bitmap_xor
bitmap_xor(q, mask)
calculates bitwise v ^ mask
for every v
point of every time series returned from q
. Metric names are stripped from the resulting series.
buckets_limit
buckets_limit(limit, buckets)
limits the number of histogram buckets to the given limit
. See also prometheus_buckets and histogram_quantile.
ceil
ceil(q)
rounds every point for every time series returned by q
to the upper nearest integer. This function is supported by PromQL. See also floor and round.
clamp
clamp(q, min, max)
clamps every point for every time series returned by q
with the given min
and max
values. This function is supported by PromQL. See also clamp_min and clamp_max.
clamp_max
clamp_max(q, max)
clamps every point for every time series returned by q
with the given max
value. This function is supported by PromQL. See also clamp and clamp_min.
clamp_min
clamp_min(q, min)
clamps every pount for every time series returned by q
with the given min
value. This function is supported by PromQL. See also clamp and clamp_max.
cos
cos(q)
returns cos(v)
for every v
point of every time series returned by q
. Metric names are stripped from the resulting series. This function is supported by PromQL. See also sin.
cosh
cosh(q)
returns hyperbolic cosine for every point of every time series returned by q
. Metric names are stripped from the resulting series. This function is supported by PromQL. This function is supported by PromQL. See also acosh.
day_of_month
day_of_month(q)
returns the day of month for every point of every time series returned by q
. It is expected that q
returns unix timestamps. The returned values are in the range [1...31]
. Metric names are stripped from the resulting series. This function is supported by PromQL.
day_of_week
day_of_week(q)
returns the day of week for every point of every time series returned by q
. It is expected that q
returns unix timestamps. The returned values are in the range [0...6]
, where 0
means Sunday and 6
means Saturday. Metric names are stripped from the resulting series. This function is supported by PromQL.
days_in_month
days_in_month(q)
returns the number of days in the month identified by every point of every time series returned by q
. It is expected that q
returns unix timestamps. The returned values are in the range [28...31]
. Metric names are stripped from the resulting series. This function is supported by PromQL.
deg
deg(q)
converts Radians to degrees for every point of every time series returned by q
. Metric names are stripped from the resulting series. This function is supported by PromQL. See also rad.
end
end()
returns the unix timestamp in seconds for the last point. See also start. It is known as end
query arg passed to /api/v1/query_range.
exp
exp(q)
calculates the e^v
for every point v
of every time series returned by q
. Metric names are stripped from the resulting series. See also ln. This function is supported by PromQL.
floor
floor(q)
rounds every point for every time series returned by q
to the lower nearest integer. See also ceil and round. This function is supported by PromQL.
histogram_avg
histogram_avg(buckets)
calculates the average value for the given buckets
. It can be used for calculating the average over the given time range across multiple time series. For exmple, histogram_avg(sum(histogram_over_time(response_time_duration_seconds[5m])) by (vmrange,job))
would return the average response time per each job
over the last 5 minutes.
histogram_quantile
histogram_quantile(phi, buckets)
calculates phi
-quantile over the given histogram buckets. phi
must be in the range [0...1]
. For example, histogram_quantile(0.5, sum(rate(http_request_duration_seconds_bucket[5m]) by (le))
would return median request duration for all the requests during the last 5 minutes. It accepts optional third arg - boundsLabel
. In this case it returns lower
and upper
bounds for the estimated percentile. See this issue for details. This function is supported by PromQL (except of the boundLabel
arg). See also histogram_quantiles and histogram_share.
histogram_quantiles
histogram_quantiles("phiLabel", phi1, ..., phiN, buckets)
calculates the given phi*
-quantiles over the given histogram buckets. phi*
must be in the range [0...1]
. Each calculated quantile is returned in a separate time series with the corresponding {phiLabel="phi*"}
label. See also histogram_quantile.
histogram_share
histogram_share(le, buckets)
calculates the share (in the range [0...1]
) for buckets
that fall below le
. Useful for calculating SLI and SLO. This is inverse to histogram_quantile.
histogram_stddev
histogram_stddev(buckets)
calculates standard deviation for the given buckets
.
histogram_stdvar
histogram_stdvar(buckets)
calculates standard variance for the given buckets
. It can be used for calculating standard deviation over the given time range across multiple time series. For example, histogram_stdvar(sum(histogram_over_time(temperature[24])) by (vmrange,country))
would return standard deviation for the temperature per each country over the last 24 hours.
hour
hour(q)
returns the hour for every point of every time series returned by q
. It is expected that q
returns unix timestamps. The returned values are in the range [0...23]
. Metric names are stripped from the resulting series. This function is supported by PromQL.
interpolate
interpolate(q)
fills gaps with linearly interpolated values calculated from the last and the next non-empty points per each time series returned by q
. See also keep_last_value and keep_next_value.
keep_last_value
keep_last_value(q)
fills gaps with the value of the last non-empty point in every time series returned by q
. See also keep_next_value and interpolate.
keep_next_value
keep_next_value(q)
fills gaps with the value of the next non-empty point in every time series returned by q
. See also keep_last_value and interpolate.
limit_offset
limit_offset(limit, offset, q)
skips offset
time series from series returned by q
and then returns up to limit
of the remaining time series per each group. This allows implementing simple paging for q
time series. See also limitk.
ln
ln(q)
calculates ln(v)
for every point v
of every time series returned by q
. Metric names are stripped from the resulting series. This function is supported by PromQL. See also exp and log2.
log2
log2(q)
calculates log2(v)
for every point v
of every time series returned by q
. Metric names are stripped from the resulting series. This function is supported by PromQL. See also log10 and ln.
log10
log10(q)
calculates log10(v)
for every point v
of every time series returned by q
. Metric names are stripped from the resulting series. This function is supported by PromQL. See also log2 and ln.
minute
minute(q)
returns the minute for every point of every time series returned by q
. It is expected that q
returns unix timestamps. The returned values are in the range [0...59]
. Metric names are stripped from the resulting series. This function is supported by PromQL.
month
month(q)
returns the month for every point of every time series returned by q
. It is expected that q
returns unix timestamps. The returned values are in the range [1...12]
, where 1
means January and 12
means December. Metric names are stripped from the resulting series. This function is supported by PromQL.
now
now()
returns the current timestamp as a floating-point value in seconds. See also time.
pi
pi()
returns Pi number. This function is supported by PromQL.
rad
rad(q)
converts degrees to Radians for every point of every time series returned by q
. Metric names are stripped from the resulting series. This function is supported by PromQL. See also deg.
prometheus_buckets
prometheus_buckets(buckets)
converts VictoriaMetrics histogram buckets with vmrange
labels to Prometheus histogram buckets with le
labels. This may be useful for building heatmaps in Grafana. See also histogram_quantile and buckets_limit.
rand
rand(seed)
returns pseudo-random numbers on the range [0...1]
with even distribution. Optional seed
can be used as a seed for pseudo-random number generator. See also rand_normal and rand_exponential.
rand_exponential
rand_exponential(seed)
returns pseudo-random numbers with exponential distribution. Optional seed
can be used as a seed for pseudo-random number generator. See also rand and rand_normal.
rand_normal
rand_normal(seed)
returns pesudo-random numbers with normal distribution. Optional seed
can be used as a seed for pseudo-random number generator. See also rand and rand_exponential.
range_avg
range_avg(q)
calculates the avg value across points per each time series returned by q
.
range_first
range_first(q)
returns the value for the first point per each time series returned by q
.
range_last
range_last(q)
returns the value for the last point per each time series returned by q
.
range_max
range_max(q)
calculates the max value across points per each time series returned by q
.
range_median
range_median(q)
calculates the median value across points per each time series returned by q
.
range_min
range_min(q)
calculates the min value across points per each time series returned by q
.
range_quantile
range_quantile(phi, q)
returns phi
-quantile across points per each time series returned by q
. phi
must be in the range [0...1]
.
range_sum
range_sum(q)
calculates the sum of points per each time series returned by q
. Metric names are stripped from the resulting series.
remove_resets
remove_resets(q)
removes counter resets from time series returned by q
.
round
round(q, nearest)
round every point of every time series returned by q
to the nearest
multiple. If nearest
is missing then the rounding is performed to the nearest integer. This function is supported by PromQL. See also floor and ceil.
ru
ru(free, max)
calculates resource utilization in the range [0%...100%]
for the given free
and max
resources. For instance, ru(node_memory_MemFree_bytes, node_memory_MemTotal_bytes)
returns memory utilization over node_exporter metrics.
running_avg
running_avg(q)
calculates the running avg per each time series returned by q
.
running_max
running_max(q)
calculates the running max per each time series returned by q
.
running_min
running_min(q)
calculates the running min per each time series returned by q
.
running_sum
running_sum(q)
calculates the running sum per each time series returned by q
. Metric names are stripped from the resulting series.
scalar
scalar(q)
returns q
if q
contains only a single time series. Otherwise it returns nothing. This function is supported by PromQL.
sgn
sgn(q)
returns 1
if v>0
, -1
if v<0
and 0
if v==0
for every point v
of every time series returned by q
. Metric names are stripped from the resulting series. This function is supported by PromQL.
sin
sin(q)
returns sin(v)
for every v
point of every time series returned by q
. Metric names are stripped from the resulting series. This function is supported by MetricsQL. See also cos.
sinh
sinh(q)
returns hyperbolic sine for every point of every time series returned by q
. Metric names are stripped from the resulting series. This function is supported by MetricsQL. See also cosh.
tan
tan(q)
returns tan(v)
for every v
point of every time series returned by q
. Metric names are stripped from the resulting series. This function is supported by MetricsQL. See also atan.
tanh
tanh(q)
returns hyperbolic tangent for every point of every time series returned by q
. Metric names are stripped from the resulting series. This function is supported by MetricsQL. See also atanh.
smooth_exponential
smooth_exponential(q, sf)
smooths points per each time series returned by q
using exponential moving average with the given smooth factor sf
.
sort
sort(q)
sorts series in ascending order by the last point in every time series returned by q
. This function is supported by PromQL. See also sort_desc.
sort_by_label
sort_by_label(q, label1, ... labelN)
sorts series in ascending order by the given set of labels. For example, sort_by_label(foo, "bar")
would sort foo
series by values of the label bar
in these series. See also sort_by_label_desc.
sort_by_label_desc
sort_by_label_desc(q, label1, ... labelN)
sorts series in descending order by the given set of labels. For example, sort_by_label(foo, "bar")
would sort foo
series by values of the label bar
in these series. See also sort_by_label.
sort_desc
sort_desc(q)
sorts series in descending order by the last point in every time series returned by q
. This function is supported by PromQL. See also sort.
sqrt
sqrt(q)
calculates square root for every point of every time series returned by q
. Metric names are stripped from the resulting series. This function is supported by PromQL.
start
start()
returns unix timestamp in seconds for the first point. See also end. It is known as start
query arg passed to /api/v1/query_range.
step
step()
returns the step in seconds (aka interval) between the returned points. It is known as step
query arg passed to /api/v1/query_range.
time
time()
returns unix timestamp for every returned point. This function is supported by PromQL.
timezone_offset
timezone_offset(tz)
returns offset in seconds for the given timezone tz
relative to UTC. This can be useful when combining with datetime-related functions. For example, day_of_week(time()+timezone_offset("America/Los_Angeles"))
would return weekdays for America/Los_Angeles
time zone. Special Local
time zone can be used for returning an offset for the time zone set on the host where VictoriaMetrics runs. See the list of supported timezones.
ttf
ttf(free)
estimates the time in seconds needed to exhaust free
resources. For instance, ttf(node_filesystem_avail_byte)
returns the time to storage space exhaustion. This function may be useful for capacity planning.
union
union(q1, ..., qN)
returns a union of time series returned from q1
, ..., qN
. The union
function name can be skipped - the following queries are quivalent: union(q1, q2)
and (q1, q2)
. It is expected that each q*
query returns time series with unique sets of labels. Otherwise only the first time series out of series with identical set of labels is returned. Use alias and label_set functions for giving unique labelsets per each q*
query:
vector
vector(q)
returns q
, e.g. it does nothing in MetricsQL. This function is supported by PromQL.
year
year(q)
returns the year for every point of every time series returned by q
. It is expected that q
returns unix timestamps. Metric names are stripped from the resulting series. This function is supported by PromQL.
Label manipulation functions
Label manipulation functions perform manipulations with lables on the selected rollup results. Additional details:
- If label manipulation function is applied directly to a series_selector, then the default_rollup() function is automatically applied before performing the label transformation. For example,
alias(temperature, "foo")
is implicitly transformed toalias(default_rollup(temperature[1i]), "foo")
.
See also implicit query conversions.
alias
alias(q, "name")
sets the given name
to all the time series returned by q
. For example, alias(up, "foobar")
would rename up
series to foobar
series.
label_copy
label_copy(q, "src_label1", "dst_label1", ..., "src_labelN", "dst_labelN")
copies label values from src_label*
to dst_label*
for all the time series returned by q
. If src_label
is empty, then the corresponding dst_label
is left untouched.
label_del
label_del(q, "label1", ..., "labelN")
deletes the given label*
labels from all the time series returned by q
.
label_graphite_group
label_graphite_group(q, groupNum1, ... groupNumN)
replaces metric names returned from q
with the given Graphite group values concatenated via .
char. For example, label_graphite_group({__graphite__="foo*.bar.*"}, 0, 2)
would substitute foo<any_value>.bar.<other_value>
metric names with foo<any_value>.<other_value>
. This function is useful for aggregating Graphite metrics with aggregate functions. For example, the following query would return per-app memory usage:
sum by (__name__) (
label_graphite_group({__graphite__="app*.host*.memory_usage"}, 0)
)
label_join
label_join(q, "dst_label", "separator", "src_label1", ..., "src_labelN")
joins src_label*
values with the given separator
and stores the result in dst_label
. This is performed individually per each time series returned by q
. For example, label_join(up{instance="xxx",job="yyy"}, "foo", "-", "instance", "job")
would store xxx-yyy
label value into foo
label. This function is supported by PromQL.
label_keep
label_keep(q, "label1", ..., "labelN")
deletes all the labels except of the listed label*
labels in all the time series returned by q
.
label_lowercase
label_lowercase(q, "label1", ..., "labelN")
lowercases values for the given label*
labels in all the time series returned by q
.
label_map
label_map(q, "label", "src_value1", "dst_value1", ..., "src_valueN", "dst_valueN")
maps label
values from src_*
to dst*
for all the time seires returned by q
.
label_match
label_match(q, "label", "regexp")
drops time series from q
with label
not matching the given regexp
. This function can be useful after rollup-like functions, which may return multiple time series for every input series. See also label_mismatch.
label_mismatch
label_mismatch(q, "label", "regexp")
drops time series from q
with label
matching the given regexp
. This function can be useful after rollup-like functions, which may return multiple time series for every input series. See also label_match.
label_move
label_move(q, "src_label1", "dst_label1", ..., "src_labelN", "dst_labelN")
moves label values from src_label*
to dst_label*
for all the time series returned by q
. If src_label
is empty, then the corresponding dst_label
is left untouched.
label_replace
label_replace(q, "dst_label", "replacement", "src_label", "regex")
applies the given regex
to src_label
and stores the replacement
in dst_label
if the given regex
matches src_label
. The replacement
may contain references to regex captures such as $1
, $2
, etc. These references are substituted by the corresponding regex captures. For example, label_replace(up{job="node-exporter"}, "foo", "bar-$1", "job", "node-(.+)")
would store bar-node-exporter
label value into foo
label. This function is supported by PromQL.
label_set
label_set(q, "label1", "value1", ..., "labelN", "valueN")
sets {label1="value1", ..., labelN="valueN"}
labels to all the time series returned by q
.
label_transform
label_transform(q, "label", "regexp", "replacement")
substitutes all the regexp
occurences by the given replacement
in the given label
.
label_uppercase
label_uppercase(q, "label1", ..., "labelN")
uppercases values for the given label*
labels in all the time series returned by q
.
label_value
label_value(q, "label")
returns number values for the given label
for every time series returned by q
. For example, if label_value(foo, "bar")
is applied to foo{bar="1.234"}
, then it will return a time series foo{bar="1.234"}
with 1.234
value.
Aggregate functions
Aggregate functions calculate aggregates over groups of rollup results. Additional details:
- By default a single group is used for aggregation. Multiple independent groups can be set up by specifying grouping labels in
by
andwithout
modifiers. For example,count(up) by (job)
would group rollup results byjob
label value and calculate the count aggregate function independently per each group, whilecount(up) without (instance)
would group rollup results by all the labels exceptinstance
before calculating count aggregate function independently per each group. Multiple labels can be put inby
andwithout
modifiers. - If the aggregate function is applied directly to a series_selector, then the default_rollup() function is automatically applied before cacluating the aggregate. For example,
count(up)
is implicitly transformed tocount(default_rollup(up[1i]))
. - Aggregate functions accept arbitrary number of args. For example,
avg(q1, q2, q3)
would return the average values for every point across time series returned byq1
,q2
andq3
. - Aggregate functions support optional
limit N
suffix, which can be used for limiting the number of output groups. For example,sum(x) by (y) limit 3
limits the number of groups for the aggregation to 3. All the other groups are ignored.
See also implicit query conversions.
any
any(q) by (group_labels)
returns a single series per group_labels
out of time series returned by q
. See also group.
avg
avg(q) by (group_labels)
returns the average value per group_labels
for time series returned by q
. The aggregate is calculated individually per each group of points with the same timestamp. This function is supported by PromQL.
bottomk
bottomk(k, q)
returns up to k
points with the smallest values across all the time series returned by q
. The aggregate is calculated individually per each group of points with the same timestamp. This function is supported by PromQL. See also topk.
bottomk_avg
bottomk_avg(k, q, "other_label=other_value")
returns up to k
time series from q
with the smallest averages. If an optional other_label=other_value
arg is set, then the sum of the remaining time series is returned with the given label. For example, bottomk_avg(3, sum(process_resident_memory_bytes) by (job), "job=other")
would return up to 3 time series with the smallest averages plus a time series with {job="other"}
label with the sum of the remaining series if any. See also topk_avg.
bottomk_last
bottomk_last(k, q, "other_label=other_value")
returns up to k
time series from q
with the smallest last values. If an optional other_label=other_value
arg is set, then the sum of the remaining time series is returned with the given label. For example, bottomk_max(3, sum(process_resident_memory_bytes) by (job), "job=other")
would return up to 3 time series with the smallest maximums plus a time series with {job="other"}
label with the sum of the remaining series if any. See also topk_last.
bottomk_max
bottomk_max(k, q, "other_label=other_value")
returns up to k
time series from q
with the smallest maximums. If an optional other_label=other_value
arg is set, then the sum of the remaining time series is returned with the given label. For example, bottomk_max(3, sum(process_resident_memory_bytes) by (job), "job=other")
would return up to 3 time series with the smallest maximums plus a time series with {job="other"}
label with the sum of the remaining series if any. See also topk_max.
bottomk_median
bottomk_median(k, q, "other_label=other_value")
returns up to k
time series from q with the smallest medians. If an optional
other_label=other_valuearg is set, then the sum of the remaining time series is returned with the given label. For example,
bottomk_median(3, sum(process_resident_memory_bytes) by (job), "job=other")would return up to 3 time series with the smallest medians plus a time series with
{job="other"}` label with the sum of the remaining series if any. See also topk_median.
bottomk_min
bottomk_min(k, q, "other_label=other_value")
returns up to k
time series from q
with the smallest minimums. If an optional other_label=other_value
arg is set, then the sum of the remaining time series is returned with the given label. For example, bottomk_min(3, sum(process_resident_memory_bytes) by (job), "job=other")
would return up to 3 time series with the smallest minimums plus a time series with {job="other"}
label with the sum of the remaining series if any. See also topk_min.
count
count(q) by (group_labels)
returns the number of non-empty points per group_labels
for time series returned by q
. The aggregate is calculated individually per each group of points with the same timestamp. This function is supported by PromQL.
count_values
count_values("label", q)
counts the number of points with the same value and stores the counts in a time series with an additional label
, wich contains each initial value. The aggregate is calculated individually per each group of points with the same timestamp. This function is supported by PromQL.
distinct
distinct(q)
calculates the number of unique values per each group of points with the same timestamp.
geomean
geomean(q)
calculates geometric mean per each group of points with the same timestamp.
group
group(q) by (group_labels)
returns 1
per each group_labels
for time series returned by q
. This function is supported by PromQL. See also any.
histogram
histogram(q)
calculates VictoriaMetrics histogram per each group of points with the same timestamp. Useful for visualizing big number of time series via a heatmap. See this article for more details.
limitk
limitk(k, q) by (group_labels)
returns up to k
time series per each group_labels
out of time series returned by q
. The returned set of time series remain the same across calls. See also limit_offset.
mad
mad(q) by (group_labels)
returns the Median absolute deviation per each group_labels
for all the time series returned by q
. The aggregate is calculated individually per each group of points with the same timestamp. See also outliers_mad and stddev.
max
max(q) by (group_labels)
returns the maximum value per each group_labels
for all the time series returned by q
. The aggregate is calculated individually per each group of points with the same timestamp. This function is supported by PromQL.
median
median(q) by (group_labels)
returns the median value per each group_labels
for all the time series returned by q
. The aggregate is calculated individually per each group of points with the same timestamp.
min
min(q) by (group_labels)
returns the minimum value per each group_labels
for all the time series returned by q
. The aggregate is calculated individually per each group of points with the same timestamp. This function is supported by PromQL.
mode
mode(q) by (group_labels)
returns mode per each group_labels
for all the time series returned by q
. The aggregate is calculated individually per each group of points with the same timestamp.
outliers_mad
outliers_mad(tolerance, q)
returns time series from q
with at least a single point outside Median absolute deviation (aka MAD) multiplied by tolerance
. E.g. it returns time series with at least a single point below median(q) - mad(q)
or a single point above median(q) + mad(q)
. See also outliersk and mad.
outliersk
outliersk(k, q)
returns up to k
time series with the biggest standard deviation (aka outliers) out of time series returned by q
. See also outliers_mad.
quantile
quantile(phi, q) by (group_labels)
calculates phi
-quantile per each group_labels
for all the time series returned by q
. phi
must be in the range [0...1]
. The aggregate is calculated individually per each group of points with the same timestamp. This function is supported by PromQL. See also quantiles.
quantiles
quantiles("phiLabel", phi1, ..., phiN, q)
calculates phi*
-quantiles for all the time series returned by q
and return them in time series with {phiLabel="phi*"}
label. phi*
must be in the range [0...1]
. The aggregate is calculated individually per each group of points with the same timestamp. See also quantile.
stddev
stddev(q) by (group_labels)
calculates standard deviation per each group_labels
for all the time series returned by q
. The aggregate is calculated individually per each group of points with the same timestamp. This function is supported by PromQL.
stdvar
stdvar(q) by (group_labels)
calculates standard variance per each group_labels
for all the time series returned by q
. The aggregate is calculated individually per each group of points with the same timestamp. This function is supported by PromQL.
sum
sum(q) by (group_labels)
returns the sum per each group_labels
for all the time series returned by q
. The aggregate is calculated individually per each group of points with the same timestamp. This function is supported by PromQL.
sum2
sum2(q) by (group_labels)
calculates the sum of squares per each group_labels
for all the time series returned by q
. The aggregate is calculated individually per each group of points with the same timestamp.
topk
topk(k, q)
returns up to k
points with the biggest values across all the time series returned by q
. The aggregate is calculated individually per each group of points with the same timestamp. This function is supported by PromQL. See also bottomk.
topk_avg
topk_avg(k, q, "other_label=other_value")
returns up to k
time series from q
with the biggest averages. If an optional other_label=other_value
arg is set, then the sum of the remaining time series is returned with the given label. For example, topk_avg(3, sum(process_resident_memory_bytes) by (job), "job=other")
would return up to 3 time series with the biggest averages plus a time series with {job="other"}
label with the sum of the remaining series if any. See also bottomk_avg.
topk_last
topk_last(k, q, "other_label=other_value")
returns up to k
time series from q
with the biggest last values. If an optional other_label=other_value
arg is set, then the sum of the remaining time series is returned with the given label. For example, topk_max(3, sum(process_resident_memory_bytes) by (job), "job=other")
would return up to 3 time series with the biggest amaximums plus a time series with {job="other"}
label with the sum of the remaining series if any. See also bottomk_last.
topk_max
topk_max(k, q, "other_label=other_value")
returns up to k
time series from q
with the biggest maximums. If an optional other_label=other_value
arg is set, then the sum of the remaining time series is returned with the given label. For example, topk_max(3, sum(process_resident_memory_bytes) by (job), "job=other")
would return up to 3 time series with the biggest amaximums plus a time series with {job="other"}
label with the sum of the remaining series if any. See also bottomk_max.
topk_median
topk_median(k, q, "other_label=other_value")
returns up to k
time series from q
with the biggest medians. If an optional other_label=other_value
arg is set, then the sum of the remaining time series is returned with the given label. For example, topk_median(3, sum(process_resident_memory_bytes) by (job), "job=other")
would return up to 3 time series with the biggest medians plus a time series with {job="other"}
label with the sum of the remaining series if any. See also bottomk_median.
topk_min
topk_min(k, q, "other_label=other_value")
returns up to k
time series from q
with the biggest minimums. If an optional other_label=other_value
arg is set, then the sum of the remaining time series is returned with the given label. For example, topk_min(3, sum(process_resident_memory_bytes) by (job), "job=other")
would return up to 3 time series with the biggest minimums plus a time series with {job="other"}
label with the sum of the remaining series if any. See also bottomk_min.
zscore
zscore(q) by (group_labels)
returns z-score values per each group_labels
for all the time series returned by q
. The aggregate is calculated individually per each group of points with the same timestamp. Useful for detecting anomalies in the group of related time series.
Subqueries
MetricsQL supports and extends PromQL subqueries. See this article for details. Any nested rollup functions form a subquery. Nested rollup functions can be implicit thanks to the implicit query conversions. For example, delta(sum(m))
is implicitly converted to delta(sum(default_rollup(m[1i]))[1i:1i])
, so it becomes a subquery, since it contains default_rollup nested into delta.
VictoriaMetrics performs subqueries in the following way:
- It calculates the inner rollup function using the
step
value from the outer rollup function. For example, ifmax_over_time(rate(http_requests_total[5m])[1h:30s])
is executed, then therate(http_requests_total[5m])
is calculated with thestep
equal to30s
. The resulting data points are algined by thestep
. - It calculates the outer rollup function over the results of the inner rollup function using the
step
value passed by Grafana to /api/v1/query_range.
Implicit query conversions
VictoriaMetrics performs the following implicit conversions for incoming queries before starting the calculations:
- If lookbehind window in square brackets is missing inside rollup function, then
[1i]
is automatically added there. The[1i]
means onestep
value, which is passed to /api/v1/query_range. It is also known as$__interval
in Grafana. For example,rate(http_requests_count)
is automatically transformed torate(http_requests_count[1i])
. - All the series selectors, which aren't wrapped into rollup functions, are automatically wrapped into default_rollup function. Examples:
foo
is transformed todefault_rollup(foo[1i])
foo + bar
is transformed todefault_rollup(foo[1i]) + default_rollup(bar[1i])
count(up)
is transformed tocount(default_rollup(up[1i]))
, because count isn't a rollup function - it is aggregate functionabs(temperature)
is transformed toabs(default_rollup(temperature[1i]))
, because abs isn't a rollup function - it is transform function
- If
step
in square brackets is missing inside subquery, then1i
step is automatically added there. For example,avg_over_time(rate(http_requests_total[5m])[1h])
is automatically converted toavg_over_time(rate(http_requests_total[5m])[1h:1i])
. - If something other than series selector is passed to rollup function, then a subquery with
1i
lookbehind window and1i
step is automatically formed. For example,rate(sum(up))
is automatically converted torate((sum(default_rollup(up[1i])))[1i:1i])
.