* rebase 2024-07-01, picks previous renaming to `limitk()` and `limit_ratio()` Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * gofumpt -d -extra Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * more lint fixes Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * more lint fixes+ Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * put limitk() and limit_ratio() behind --enable-feature=promql-experimental-functions Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * EnableExperimentalFunctions for TestConcurrentRangeQueries() also Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * use testutil.RequireEqual to fix tests, WIP equivalent thingie for require.Contains Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * lint fix Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * moar linting Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * rebase 2024-06-19 Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * re-add limit(2, metric) testing for N=2 common series subset Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * move `ratio = param` to default switch case, for better readability Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * gofumpt -d -extra util/testutil/cmp.go Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * early break when reaching k elems in limitk(), should have always been so (!) Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * small typo fix Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * no-change small break-loop rearrange for readability Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * remove IsNan(ratio) condition in switch-case, already handled as input validation Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * no-change adding some comments Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * no-change simplify fullMatrix() helper functions used for tests Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * add `limitk(-1, metric)` testcase, which is handled as any k < 1 case Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * engine_test.go: no-change create `requireCommonSeries() helper func (moving code into it) for readability Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * rebase 2024-06-21 Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * engine_test.go: HAPPY NOW about its code -> reorg, create and use simpleRangeQuery() function, less lines and more readable ftW \o/ Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * move limitk(), limit_ratio() testing to promql/promqltest/testdata/limit.test Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * remove stale leftover after moving tests from engine_test.go to testdata/ Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * fix flaky `limit_ratio(0.5, ...)` test case Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * Update promql/engine.go Co-authored-by: Julius Volz <julius.volz@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * Update promql/engine.go Co-authored-by: Julius Volz <julius.volz@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * Update promql/engine.go Co-authored-by: Julius Volz <julius.volz@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * fix AddRatioSample() implementation to use a single conditional (instead of switch/case + fallback return) Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * docs/querying/operators.md: document r < 0 Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * add negative limit_ratio() example to docs/querying/examples.md Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * move more extensive docu examples to docs/querying/operators.md Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * typo Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * small docu fix for poor-mans-normality-check, add it to limit.test ;) Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * limit.test: expand "Poor man's normality check" to whole eval range Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * restore mistakenly removed existing small comment Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * expand poors-man-normality-check case(s) Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * Revert "expand poors-man-normality-check case(s)" This reverts commit f69e1603b2ebe69c0a100197cfbcf6f81644b564, indeed too flaky 0:) Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * remove humor from docs/querying/operators.md Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * fix signoff Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * add web/ui missing changes Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * expand limit_ratio test cases, cross-fingering they'll not be flaky Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * remove flaky test Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * add missing warnings.Merge(ws) in instant-query return shortcut Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * add missing LimitK||LimitRatio case to codemirror-promql/src/parser/parser.ts Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * fix ui-lint Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> * actually fix returned warnings :] Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> --------- Signed-off-by: JuanJo Ciarlante <juanjosec@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Julius Volz <julius.volz@gmail.com>
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title | nav_title | sort_rank |
---|---|---|
Querying examples | Examples | 4 |
Query examples
Simple time series selection
Return all time series with the metric http_requests_total
:
http_requests_total
Return all time series with the metric http_requests_total
and the given
job
and handler
labels:
http_requests_total{job="apiserver", handler="/api/comments"}
Return a whole range of time (in this case 5 minutes up to the query time) for the same vector, making it a range vector:
http_requests_total{job="apiserver", handler="/api/comments"}[5m]
Note that an expression resulting in a range vector cannot be graphed directly, but viewed in the tabular ("Console") view of the expression browser.
Using regular expressions, you could select time series only for jobs whose
name match a certain pattern, in this case, all jobs that end with server
:
http_requests_total{job=~".*server"}
All regular expressions in Prometheus use RE2 syntax.
To select all HTTP status codes except 4xx ones, you could run:
http_requests_total{status!~"4.."}
Subquery
Return the 5-minute rate of the http_requests_total
metric for the past 30 minutes, with a resolution of 1 minute.
rate(http_requests_total[5m])[30m:1m]
This is an example of a nested subquery. The subquery for the deriv
function uses the default resolution. Note that using subqueries unnecessarily is unwise.
max_over_time(deriv(rate(distance_covered_total[5s])[30s:5s])[10m:])
Using functions, operators, etc.
Return the per-second rate for all time series with the http_requests_total
metric name, as measured over the last 5 minutes:
rate(http_requests_total[5m])
Assuming that the http_requests_total
time series all have the labels job
(fanout by job name) and instance
(fanout by instance of the job), we might
want to sum over the rate of all instances, so we get fewer output time series,
but still preserve the job
dimension:
sum by (job) (
rate(http_requests_total[5m])
)
If we have two different metrics with the same dimensional labels, we can apply binary operators to them and elements on both sides with the same label set will get matched and propagated to the output. For example, this expression returns the unused memory in MiB for every instance (on a fictional cluster scheduler exposing these metrics about the instances it runs):
(instance_memory_limit_bytes - instance_memory_usage_bytes) / 1024 / 1024
The same expression, but summed by application, could be written like this:
sum by (app, proc) (
instance_memory_limit_bytes - instance_memory_usage_bytes
) / 1024 / 1024
If the same fictional cluster scheduler exposed CPU usage metrics like the following for every instance:
instance_cpu_time_ns{app="lion", proc="web", rev="34d0f99", env="prod", job="cluster-manager"}
instance_cpu_time_ns{app="elephant", proc="worker", rev="34d0f99", env="prod", job="cluster-manager"}
instance_cpu_time_ns{app="turtle", proc="api", rev="4d3a513", env="prod", job="cluster-manager"}
instance_cpu_time_ns{app="fox", proc="widget", rev="4d3a513", env="prod", job="cluster-manager"}
...
...we could get the top 3 CPU users grouped by application (app
) and process
type (proc
) like this:
topk(3, sum by (app, proc) (rate(instance_cpu_time_ns[5m])))
Assuming this metric contains one time series per running instance, you could count the number of running instances per application like this:
count by (app) (instance_cpu_time_ns)
If we are exploring some metrics for their labels, to e.g. be able to aggregate over some of them, we could use the following:
limitk(10, app_foo_metric_bar)
Alternatively, if we wanted the returned timeseries to be more evenly sampled, we could use the following to get approximately 10% of them:
limit_ratio(0.1, app_foo_metric_bar)