Unary expressions cause parsing errors if they are done in the lexer
by tokenizing them into the number.
This fix moves unary expressions to the parser.
This commits implements the OR operation between two vectors.
Vector matching using the ON clause is added to limit the set of
labels that define a match between two elements. Group modifiers
(GROUP_LEFT/GROUP_RIGHT) to request many-to-one matching are added.
This adds support for scientific notation in the expression language, as
well as for all possible literal forms of +Inf/-Inf/NaN.
TODO: Keep enough state in the parser/lexer to distinguish contexts in
which "Inf", "NaN", etc. should be parsed as a number vs. parsed as a
label name. Currently, foo{nan="bar"} would be a syntax error. However,
that is an existing bug for all our reserved words. E.g. foo{sum="bar"}
is a syntax error as well. This should be fixed separately.
This checks for the basic behaviour of GetFingerprintsForLabelMatchers, that is, whether the different matcher types filter the correct fingerprints and intersections are correct.
The capacity is basically how many persisted head chunks we will count
at most while doing other things, in particular checkpointing. To
limit the amount of already counted head chunks, keep this number low,
otherwise we will easily checkpoint too often if checkpoints take long
anyway.
Another run of 'godep save' fixed the import path.
So you first have to run 'godep update <packages>' and then a 'godep save'.
Let's see if this satisfies Travis.
In that commit, the 'maintainSeries' call was accidentally removed.
This commit refactors things a bit so that there is now a clean
'maintainMemorySeries' and a 'maintainArchivedSeries' call.
Straighten the nomenclature a bit (consistently use 'drop' for
chunks and 'purge' for series/metrics).
Remove the annoying 'Completed maintenance sweep through archived
fingerprints' message if there were no archived fingerprints to do
maintenance on.
Since we are now getting really deep into floating point calculation,
the tests had to take into account the precision loss. Since the rule
tests are based on direct line matching in the output, implementing
the "almost equal" semantics was pretty cumbersome, but here we are.
This exposes samples via the console templates in the
text exposition format, which the parser will fall back to.
This is not a proper federation solution, but should tide us
over for now. Extenions could include passing in a query or queries in
the url parameters.