2017-10-26 13:53:27 +00:00
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---
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title: Querying basics
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nav_title: Basics
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sort_rank: 1
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---
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# Querying Prometheus
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Prometheus provides a functional expression language that lets the user select
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and aggregate time series data in real time. The result of an expression can
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either be shown as a graph, viewed as tabular data in Prometheus's expression
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browser, or consumed by external systems via the [HTTP API](api.md).
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## Examples
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This document is meant as a reference. For learning, it might be easier to
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start with a couple of [examples](examples.md).
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## Expression language data types
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In Prometheus's expression language, an expression or sub-expression can
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evaluate to one of four types:
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* **Instant vector** - a set of time series containing a single sample for each time series, all sharing the same timestamp
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* **Range vector** - a set of time series containing a range of data points over time for each time series
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* **Scalar** - a simple numeric floating point value
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* **String** - a simple string value; currently unused
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Depending on the use-case (e.g. when graphing vs. displaying the output of an
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expression), only some of these types are legal as the result from a
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user-specified expression. For example, an expression that returns an instant
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vector is the only type that can be directly graphed.
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## Literals
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### String literals
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Strings may be specified as literals in single quotes, double quotes or
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backticks.
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PromQL follows the same [escaping rules as
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Go](https://golang.org/ref/spec#String_literals). In single or double quotes a
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backslash begins an escape sequence, which may be followed by `a`, `b`, `f`,
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`n`, `r`, `t`, `v` or `\`. Specific characters can be provided using octal
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(`\nnn`) or hexadecimal (`\xnn`, `\unnnn` and `\Unnnnnnnn`).
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No escaping is processed inside backticks. Unlike Go, Prometheus does not discard newlines inside backticks.
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Example:
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"this is a string"
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'these are unescaped: \n \\ \t'
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`these are not unescaped: \n ' " \t`
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### Float literals
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Scalar float values can be literally written as numbers of the form
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`[-](digits)[.(digits)]`.
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-2.43
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## Time series Selectors
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### Instant vector selectors
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Instant vector selectors allow the selection of a set of time series and a
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single sample value for each at a given timestamp (instant): in the simplest
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form, only a metric name is specified. This results in an instant vector
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containing elements for all time series that have this metric name.
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This example selects all time series that have the `http_requests_total` metric
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name:
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http_requests_total
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It is possible to filter these time series further by appending a set of labels
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to match in curly braces (`{}`).
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This example selects only those time series with the `http_requests_total`
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metric name that also have the `job` label set to `prometheus` and their
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`group` label set to `canary`:
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http_requests_total{job="prometheus",group="canary"}
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It is also possible to negatively match a label value, or to match label values
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against regular expressions. The following label matching operators exist:
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* `=`: Select labels that are exactly equal to the provided string.
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* `!=`: Select labels that are not equal to the provided string.
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* `=~`: Select labels that regex-match the provided string (or substring).
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* `!~`: Select labels that do not regex-match the provided string (or substring).
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For example, this selects all `http_requests_total` time series for `staging`,
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`testing`, and `development` environments and HTTP methods other than `GET`.
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http_requests_total{environment=~"staging|testing|development",method!="GET"}
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Label matchers that match empty label values also select all time series that do
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not have the specific label set at all. Regex-matches are fully anchored.
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Vector selectors must either specify a name or at least one label matcher
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that does not match the empty string. The following expression is illegal:
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{job=~".*"} # Bad!
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In contrast, these expressions are valid as they both have a selector that does not
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match empty label values.
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{job=~".+"} # Good!
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{job=~".*",method="get"} # Good!
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Label matchers can also be applied to metric names by matching against the internal
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`__name__` label. For example, the expression `http_requests_total` is equivalent to
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`{__name__="http_requests_total"}`. Matchers other than `=` (`!=`, `=~`, `!~`) may also be used.
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The following expression selects all metrics that have a name starting with `job:`:
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2017-11-22 12:11:21 +00:00
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{__name__=~"job:.*"}
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2017-10-26 13:53:27 +00:00
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2017-12-01 17:26:06 +00:00
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All regular expressions in Prometheus use [RE2
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syntax](https://github.com/google/re2/wiki/Syntax).
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2017-10-26 13:53:27 +00:00
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### Range Vector Selectors
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Range vector literals work like instant vector literals, except that they
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select a range of samples back from the current instant. Syntactically, a range
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duration is appended in square brackets (`[]`) at the end of a vector selector
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to specify how far back in time values should be fetched for each resulting
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range vector element.
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Time durations are specified as a number, followed immediately by one of the
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following units:
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* `s` - seconds
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* `m` - minutes
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* `h` - hours
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* `d` - days
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* `w` - weeks
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* `y` - years
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In this example, we select all the values we have recorded within the last 5
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minutes for all time series that have the metric name `http_requests_total` and
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a `job` label set to `prometheus`:
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http_requests_total{job="prometheus"}[5m]
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### Offset modifier
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The `offset` modifier allows changing the time offset for individual
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instant and range vectors in a query.
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For example, the following expression returns the value of
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`http_requests_total` 5 minutes in the past relative to the current
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query evaluation time:
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http_requests_total offset 5m
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Note that the `offset` modifier always needs to follow the selector
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immediately, i.e. the following would be correct:
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sum(http_requests_total{method="GET"} offset 5m) // GOOD.
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While the following would be *incorrect*:
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sum(http_requests_total{method="GET"}) offset 5m // INVALID.
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The same works for range vectors. This returns the 5-minutes rate that
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`http_requests_total` had a week ago:
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rate(http_requests_total[5m] offset 1w)
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## Operators
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Prometheus supports many binary and aggregation operators. These are described
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in detail in the [expression language operators](operators.md) page.
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## Functions
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Prometheus supports several functions to operate on data. These are described
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in detail in the [expression language functions](functions.md) page.
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## Gotchas
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2017-11-01 12:40:47 +00:00
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### Staleness
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When queries are run, timestamps at which to sample data are selected
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independently of the actual present time series data. This is mainly to support
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cases like aggregation (`sum`, `avg`, and so on), where multiple aggregated
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time series do not exactly align in time. Because of their independence,
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Prometheus needs to assign a value at those timestamps for each relevant time
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series. It does so by simply taking the newest sample before this timestamp.
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2017-11-01 12:40:47 +00:00
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If a target scrape or rule evaluation no longer returns a sample for a time
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series that was previously present, that time series will be marked as stale.
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If a target is removed, its previously returned time series will be marked as
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stale soon afterwards.
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If a query is evaluated at a sampling timestamp after a time series is marked
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stale, then no value is returned for that time series. If new samples are
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subsequently ingested for that time series, they will be returned as normal.
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If no sample is found (by default) 5 minutes before a sampling timestamp,
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no value is returned for that time series at this point in time. This
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effectively means that time series "disappear" from graphs at times where their
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latest collected sample is older than 5 minutes or after they are marked stale.
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2017-11-01 12:40:47 +00:00
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Staleness will not be marked for time series that have timestamps included in
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their scrapes. Only the 5 minute threshold will be applied in that case.
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### Avoiding slow queries and overloads
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If a query needs to operate on a very large amount of data, graphing it might
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time out or overload the server or browser. Thus, when constructing queries
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over unknown data, always start building the query in the tabular view of
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Prometheus's expression browser until the result set seems reasonable
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(hundreds, not thousands, of time series at most). Only when you have filtered
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or aggregated your data sufficiently, switch to graph mode. If the expression
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still takes too long to graph ad-hoc, pre-record it via a [recording
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rule](../configuration/recording_rules.md#recording-rules).
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This is especially relevant for Prometheus's query language, where a bare
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metric name selector like `api_http_requests_total` could expand to thousands
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of time series with different labels. Also keep in mind that expressions which
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aggregate over many time series will generate load on the server even if the
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output is only a small number of time series. This is similar to how it would
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be slow to sum all values of a column in a relational database, even if the
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output value is only a single number.
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