This function is useful to analyze promQL queries. We want to use this in Mimir to record the time range which the query touches.
I also chose to remove the `Engine` receiver because it was unnecessary, and it makes it easier to use, but happy to refactor that if you disagree.
The function is untested on its own. If you prefer to have unit tests now that its exported, I can look into adding some.
Signed-off-by: Dimitar Dimitrov <dimitar.dimitrov@grafana.com>
* Remove NewPossibleNonCounterInfo until it can be made more efficient, and avoid creating empty annotations as much as possible
Signed-off-by: Jeanette Tan <jeanette.tan@grafana.com>
Return annotations (warnings and infos) from PromQL queries
This generalizes the warnings we have already used before (but only for problems with remote read) as "annotations".
Annotations can be warnings or infos (the latter could be false positives). We do not treat them different in the API for now and return them all as "warnings". It would be easy to distinguish them and return infos separately, should that appear useful in the future.
The new annotations are then used to create a lot of warnings or infos during PromQL evaluations. Partially these are things we have wanted for a long time (e.g. inform the user that they have applied `rate` to a metric that doesn't look like a counter), but the new native histograms have created even more needs for those annotations (e.g. if a query tries to aggregate float numbers with histograms).
The annotations added here are not yet complete. A prominent example would be a warning about a range too short for a rate calculation. But such a warnings is more tricky to create with good fidelity and we will tackle it later.
Another TODO is to take annotations into account when evaluating recording rules.
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Signed-off-by: Jeanette Tan <jeanette.tan@grafana.com>
Make it more likely that contributors will run the benchmark suite.
count_values needs more than 2GB at 1,000 steps, so just run it for 100.
And remove 10-step variant because it doesn't add much to 100 and
1000-step benchmarks.
Signed-off-by: Bryan Boreham <bjboreham@gmail.com>
Otherwise we have a highly unusual situation of over 100 chunks
in the headChunks list of each series, which heavily skews
performance.
Signed-off-by: Bryan Boreham <bjboreham@gmail.com>
promql: Extend testing framework to support native histograms
This includes both the internal testing framework as well as the rules unit test feature of promtool.
This also adds a bunch of basic tests. Many of the code level tests can now be converted to tests within the framework, and more tests can be added easily.
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Signed-off-by: Harold Dost <h.dost@criteo.com>
Signed-off-by: Gregor Zeitlinger <gregor.zeitlinger@grafana.com>
Signed-off-by: Stephen Lang <stephen.lang@grafana.com>
Co-authored-by: Harold Dost <h.dost@criteo.com>
Co-authored-by: Stephen Lang <stephen.lang@grafana.com>
Co-authored-by: Gregor Zeitlinger <gregor.zeitlinger@grafana.com>
So far, `ValidateHistogram` would not detect if the count did not
include the count in the zero bucket. This commit fixes the problem
and updates all the tests that have been undetected offenders so far.
Note that this problem would only ever create false negatives, so we
never falsely rejected to store a histogram because of it.
On the other hand, `ValidateFloatHistogram` has been to strict with
the count being at least as large as the sum of the counts in all the
buckets. Float precision issues could create false positives here, see
products of PromQL evaluations, it's actually quite hard to put an
upper limit no the floating point imprecision. Users could produce the
weirdest expressions, maxing out float precision problems. Therefore,
this commit simply removes that particular check from
`ValidateFloatHistogram`.
Signed-off-by: beorn7 <beorn@grafana.com>
promql engine: check unique labels using existing map
ContainsSameLabelset constructs a map with the same hash key as the one used to compile the output of rangeEval, so we can use that one and save work.
Need to hold the timestamp so we can be sure we saw the same series in the same evaluation.
`ContainsSameLabelset` constructs a map with the same hash key as
the one used to compile the output of `rangeEval`, so we can use that
one and save work.
Need to hold the timestamp so we can be sure we saw the same series
in the same evaluation.
Signed-off-by: Bryan Boreham <bjboreham@gmail.com>
The operator changes the meaning of the metric, so the metric name should
be dropped. Technically this would be a breaking change, but it's also very
obviously a bug and not likely that anyone depends on it.
Signed-off-by: Julius Volz <julius.volz@gmail.com>