Documentation

Explore your schema using InfluxQL

This page documents an earlier version of InfluxDB OSS. InfluxDB OSS v2 is the latest stable version. See the equivalent InfluxDB v2 documentation: Explore your data schema with Flux.

InfluxQL is an SQL-like query language for interacting with data in InfluxDB. The following sections cover useful query syntax for exploring your schema.

SHOW DATABASESSHOW RETENTION POLICIESSHOW SERIES
SHOW MEASUREMENTSSHOW TAG KEYSSHOW TAG VALUES
SHOW FIELD KEYSSHOW CARDINALITYFilter meta queries by time

Sample data

The data used in this document are available for download on the Sample Data page.

Before proceeding, login to the Influx CLI.

$ influx -precision rfc3339
Connected to http://localhost:8086 version 1.11.8
InfluxDB shell 1.11.8
>

SHOW DATABASES

Returns a list of all databases on your instance.

Syntax

SHOW DATABASES

Examples

Run a SHOW DATABASES query

> SHOW DATABASES

name: databases
name
----
NOAA_water_database
_internal

The query returns database names in a tabular format. This InfluxDB instance has two databases: NOAA_water_database and _internal.

SHOW RETENTION POLICIES

Returns a list of retention policies for the specified database.

Syntax

SHOW RETENTION POLICIES [ON <database_name>]

Description of syntax

ON <database_name> is optional. If the query does not include ON <database_name>, you must specify the database with USE <database_name> in the CLI or with the db query string parameter in the InfluxDB API request.

Examples

Run a SHOW RETENTION POLICIES query with the ON clause

> SHOW RETENTION POLICIES ON NOAA_water_database

name      duration   shardGroupDuration   replicaN   default
----      --------   ------------------   --------   -------
autogen   0s         168h0m0s             1          true

The query returns the list of retention policies in the NOAA_water_database database in tabular format. The database has one retention policy called autogen. The autogen retention policy has an infinite duration, a seven-day shard group duration, a replication factor of one, and it is the DEFAULT retention policy for the database.

Run a SHOW RETENTION POLICIES query without the ON clause

Specify the database with USE <database_name>

> USE NOAA_water_database
Using database NOAA_water_database

> SHOW RETENTION POLICIES

name      duration   shardGroupDuration   replicaN   default
----      --------   ------------------   --------   -------
autogen   0s         168h0m0s             1          true

Specify the database with the db query string parameter:

~# curl -G "http://localhost:8086/query?db=NOAA_water_database&pretty=true" --data-urlencode "q=SHOW RETENTION POLICIES"

{
    "results": [
        {
            "statement_id": 0,
            "series": [
                {
                    "columns": [
                        "name",
                        "duration",
                        "shardGroupDuration",
                        "replicaN",
                        "default"
                    ],
                    "values": [
                        [
                            "autogen",
                            "0s",
                            "168h0m0s",
                            1,
                            true
                        ]
                    ]
                }
            ]
        }
    ]
}

SHOW SERIES

Returns a list of series for the specified database.

Syntax

SHOW SERIES [ON <database_name>] [FROM_clause] [WHERE <tag_key> <operator> [ '<tag_value>' | <regular_expression>]] [LIMIT_clause] [OFFSET_clause]

Description of syntax

ON <database_name> is optional. If the query does not include ON <database_name>, you must specify the database with USE <database_name> in the CLI or with the db query string parameter in the InfluxDB API request. SHOW SERIES only returns series in the database’s default retention policy, and fails if there is no default retention policy.

The FROM, WHERE, LIMIT, and OFFSET clauses are optional. The WHERE clause supports tag comparisons; field comparisons are not valid for the SHOW SERIES query.

Supported operators in the WHERE clause: =   equal to <> not equal to != not equal to =~ matches against !~ doesn’t match against

See the Data Exploration page for documentation on the FROM clause, LIMIT clause, OFFSET clause, and on Regular Expressions in Queries.

Examples

Run a SHOW SERIES query with the ON clause

// Returns series for all shards in the database and default retention policy
> SHOW SERIES ON NOAA_water_database

key
---
average_temperature,location=coyote_creek
average_temperature,location=santa_monica
h2o_feet,location=coyote_creek
h2o_feet,location=santa_monica
h2o_pH,location=coyote_creek
h2o_pH,location=santa_monica
h2o_quality,location=coyote_creek,randtag=1
h2o_quality,location=coyote_creek,randtag=2
h2o_quality,location=coyote_creek,randtag=3
h2o_quality,location=santa_monica,randtag=1
h2o_quality,location=santa_monica,randtag=2
h2o_quality,location=santa_monica,randtag=3
h2o_temperature,location=coyote_creek
h2o_temperature,location=santa_monica

The query’s output is similar to the line protocol format. Everything before the first comma is the measurement name. Everything after the first comma is either a tag key or a tag value. The NOAA_water_database has five different measurements and 14 different series.

Run a SHOW SERIES query without the ON clause

Specify the database with USE <database_name>

> USE NOAA_water_database
Using database NOAA_water_database

> SHOW SERIES

key
---
average_temperature,location=coyote_creek
average_temperature,location=santa_monica
h2o_feet,location=coyote_creek
h2o_feet,location=santa_monica
h2o_pH,location=coyote_creek
h2o_pH,location=santa_monica
h2o_quality,location=coyote_creek,randtag=1
h2o_quality,location=coyote_creek,randtag=2
h2o_quality,location=coyote_creek,randtag=3
h2o_quality,location=santa_monica,randtag=1
h2o_quality,location=santa_monica,randtag=2
h2o_quality,location=santa_monica,randtag=3
h2o_temperature,location=coyote_creek
h2o_temperature,location=santa_monica

Specify the database with the db query string parameter:

~# curl -G "http://localhost:8086/query?db=NOAA_water_database&pretty=true" --data-urlencode "q=SHOW SERIES"

{
    "results": [
        {
            "statement_id": 0,
            "series": [
                {
                    "columns": [
                        "key"
                    ],
                    "values": [
                        [
                            "average_temperature,location=coyote_creek"
                        ],
                        [
                            "average_temperature,location=santa_monica"
                        ],
                        [
                            "h2o_feet,location=coyote_creek"
                        ],
                        [
                            "h2o_feet,location=santa_monica"
                        ],
                        [
                            "h2o_pH,location=coyote_creek"
                        ],
                        [
                            "h2o_pH,location=santa_monica"
                        ],
                        [
                            "h2o_quality,location=coyote_creek,randtag=1"
                        ],
                        [
                            "h2o_quality,location=coyote_creek,randtag=2"
                        ],
                        [
                            "h2o_quality,location=coyote_creek,randtag=3"
                        ],
                        [
                            "h2o_quality,location=santa_monica,randtag=1"
                        ],
                        [
                            "h2o_quality,location=santa_monica,randtag=2"
                        ],
                        [
                            "h2o_quality,location=santa_monica,randtag=3"
                        ],
                        [
                            "h2o_temperature,location=coyote_creek"
                        ],
                        [
                            "h2o_temperature,location=santa_monica"
                        ]
                    ]
                }
            ]
        }
    ]
}

Run a SHOW SERIES query with several clauses

> SHOW SERIES ON NOAA_water_database FROM "h2o_quality" WHERE "location" = 'coyote_creek' LIMIT 2

key
---
h2o_quality,location=coyote_creek,randtag=1
h2o_quality,location=coyote_creek,randtag=2

The query returns all series in the NOAA_water_database database that are associated with the h2o_quality measurement and the tag location = coyote_creek. The LIMIT clause limits the number of series returned to two.

Run a SHOW SERIES query limited by time

Limit series returned within a specified shard group duration.

// Returns all series in the current shard.
> SHOW SERIES ON NOAA_water_database WHERE time > now() - 1m

key
---
average_temperature,location=coyote_creek
h2o_feet,location=coyote_creek
h2o_pH,location=coyote_creek
h2o_quality,location=coyote_creek,randtag=1
h2o_quality,location=coyote_creek,randtag=2
h2o_quality,location=coyote_creek,randtag=3
h2o_temperature,location=coyote_creek

The query above returns all series in the NOAA_water_database database in the current shard group. The WHERE clause limits results to series in the shard group that contain a timestamp in the last minute. Note, if a shard group duration is 7 days, results returned may be up to 7 days old.

// Returns all series in shard groups that contain a timestamp in the last 28 days.
> SHOW SERIES ON NOAA_water_database WHERE time > now() - 28d

key
---
average_temperature,location=coyote_creek
average_temperature,location=santa_monica
h2o_feet,location=coyote_creek
h2o_feet,location=santa_monica
h2o_pH,location=coyote_creek
h2o_pH,location=santa_monica
h2o_quality,location=coyote_creek,randtag=1
h2o_quality,location=coyote_creek,randtag=2
h2o_quality,location=coyote_creek,randtag=3
h2o_quality,location=santa_monica,randtag=1
h2o_quality,location=santa_monica,randtag=2
h2o_quality,location=santa_monica,randtag=3
h2o_temperature,location=coyote_creek
h2o_temperature,location=santa_monica

Note, if the specified shard group duration is 7 days, the query above returns series for the last 3 or 4 shards.

SHOW MEASUREMENTS

Returns a list of measurements for the specified database.

Syntax

SHOW MEASUREMENTS [ON <database_name>] [WITH MEASUREMENT <operator> ['<measurement_name>' | <regular_expression>]] [WHERE <tag_key> <operator> ['<tag_value>' | <regular_expression>]] [LIMIT_clause] [OFFSET_clause]

Description of Syntax

ON <database_name> is optional. If the query does not include ON <database_name>, you must specify the database with USE <database_name> in the CLI or with the db query string parameter in the InfluxDB API request.

The WITH, WHERE, LIMIT and OFFSET clauses are optional. The WHERE clause supports tag comparisons; field comparisons are not valid for the SHOW MEASUREMENTS query.

Supported operators in the WHERE clause: =   equal to <> not equal to != not equal to =~ matches against !~ doesn’t match against

See the Data Exploration page for documentation on the LIMIT clause, OFFSET clause, and on Regular expressions in queries.

Examples

Run a SHOW MEASUREMENTS query with the ON clause

> SHOW MEASUREMENTS ON NOAA_water_database

name: measurements
name
----
average_temperature
h2o_feet
h2o_pH
h2o_quality
h2o_temperature

The query returns the list of measurements in the NOAA_water_database database. The database has five measurements: average_temperature, h2o_feet, h2o_pH, h2o_quality, and h2o_temperature.

Run a SHOW MEASUREMENTS query without the ON clause

Specify the database with USE <database_name>

> USE NOAA_water_database
Using database NOAA_water_database

> SHOW MEASUREMENTS
name: measurements
name
----
average_temperature
h2o_feet
h2o_pH
h2o_quality
h2o_temperature

Specify the database with the db query string parameter:

~# curl -G "http://localhost:8086/query?db=NOAA_water_database&pretty=true" --data-urlencode "q=SHOW MEASUREMENTS"

{
  {
      "results": [
          {
              "statement_id": 0,
              "series": [
                  {
                      "name": "measurements",
                      "columns": [
                          "name"
                      ],
                      "values": [
                          [
                              "average_temperature"
                          ],
                          [
                              "h2o_feet"
                          ],
                          [
                              "h2o_pH"
                          ],
                          [
                              "h2o_quality"
                          ],
                          [
                              "h2o_temperature"
                          ]
                      ]
                  }
              ]
          }
      ]
  }

Run a SHOW MEASUREMENTS query with several clauses (i)

> SHOW MEASUREMENTS ON NOAA_water_database WITH MEASUREMENT =~ /h2o.*/ LIMIT 2 OFFSET 1

name: measurements
name
----
h2o_pH
h2o_quality

The query returns the measurements in the NOAA_water_database database that start with h2o. The LIMIT and OFFSET clauses limit the number of measurement names returned to two and offset the results by one, skipping the h2o_feet measurement.

Run a SHOW MEASUREMENTS query with several clauses (ii)

> SHOW MEASUREMENTS ON NOAA_water_database WITH MEASUREMENT =~ /h2o.*/ WHERE "randtag"  =~ /\d/

name: measurements
name
----
h2o_quality

The query returns all measurements in the NOAA_water_database that start with h2o and have values for the tag key randtag that include an integer.

SHOW TAG KEYS

Returns a list of tag keys associated with the specified database.

Syntax

SHOW TAG KEYS [ON <database_name>] [FROM_clause] [WHERE <tag_key> <operator> ['<tag_value>' | <regular_expression>]] [LIMIT_clause] [OFFSET_clause]

Description of syntax

ON <database_name> is optional. If the query does not include ON <database_name>, you must specify the database with USE <database_name> in the CLI or with the db query string parameter in the InfluxDB API request.

The FROM clause and the WHERE clause are optional. The WHERE clause supports tag comparisons; field comparisons are not valid for the SHOW TAG KEYS query.

Supported operators in the WHERE clause: =   equal to <> not equal to != not equal to =~ matches against !~ doesn’t match against

See the Data Exploration page for documentation on the FROM clause, LIMIT clause, OFFSET clause, and on Regular Expressions in Queries.

Examples

Run a SHOW TAG KEYS query with the ON clause

> SHOW TAG KEYS ON "NOAA_water_database"

name: average_temperature
tagKey
------
location

name: h2o_feet
tagKey
------
location

name: h2o_pH
tagKey
------
location

name: h2o_quality
tagKey
------
location
randtag

name: h2o_temperature
tagKey
------
location

The query returns the list of tag keys in the NOAA_water_database database. The output groups tag keys by measurement name; it shows that every measurement has the location tag key and that the h2o_quality measurement has an additional randtag tag key.

Run a SHOW TAG KEYS query without the ON clause

Specify the database with USE <database_name>

> USE NOAA_water_database
Using database NOAA_water_database

> SHOW TAG KEYS

name: average_temperature
tagKey
------
location

name: h2o_feet
tagKey
------
location

name: h2o_pH
tagKey
------
location

name: h2o_quality
tagKey
------
location
randtag

name: h2o_temperature
tagKey
------
location

Specify the database with the db query string parameter:

~# curl -G "http://localhost:8086/query?db=NOAA_water_database&pretty=true" --data-urlencode "q=SHOW TAG KEYS"

{
    "results": [
        {
            "statement_id": 0,
            "series": [
                {
                    "name": "average_temperature",
                    "columns": [
                        "tagKey"
                    ],
                    "values": [
                        [
                            "location"
                        ]
                    ]
                },
                {
                    "name": "h2o_feet",
                    "columns": [
                        "tagKey"
                    ],
                    "values": [
                        [
                            "location"
                        ]
                    ]
                },
                {
                    "name": "h2o_pH",
                    "columns": [
                        "tagKey"
                    ],
                    "values": [
                        [
                            "location"
                        ]
                    ]
                },
                {
                    "name": "h2o_quality",
                    "columns": [
                        "tagKey"
                    ],
                    "values": [
                        [
                            "location"
                        ],
                        [
                            "randtag"
                        ]
                    ]
                },
                {
                    "name": "h2o_temperature",
                    "columns": [
                        "tagKey"
                    ],
                    "values": [
                        [
                            "location"
                        ]
                    ]
                }
            ]
        }
    ]
}

Run a SHOW TAG KEYS query with several clauses

> SHOW TAG KEYS ON "NOAA_water_database" FROM "h2o_quality" LIMIT 1 OFFSET 1

name: h2o_quality
tagKey
------
randtag

The query returns tag keys from the h2o_quality measurement in the NOAA_water_database database. The LIMIT and OFFSET clauses limit the number of tag keys returned to one and offsets the results by one.

SHOW TAG VALUES

Returns the list of tag values for the specified tag key(s) in the database.

Syntax

SHOW TAG VALUES [ON <database_name>][FROM_clause] WITH KEY [ [<operator> "<tag_key>" | <regular_expression>] | [IN ("<tag_key1>","<tag_key2")]] [WHERE <tag_key> <operator> ['<tag_value>' | <regular_expression>]] [LIMIT_clause] [OFFSET_clause]

Description of syntax

ON <database_name> is optional. If the query does not include ON <database_name>, you must specify the database with USE <database_name> in the CLI or with the db query string parameter in the InfluxDB API request.

The WITH clause is required. It supports specifying a single tag key, a regular expression, and multiple tag keys.

The FROM, WHERE, LIMIT, and OFFSET clauses are optional. The WHERE clause supports tag comparisons; field comparisons are not valid for the SHOW TAG KEYS query.

Supported operators in the WITH and WHERE clauses: =   equal to <> not equal to != not equal to =~ matches against !~ doesn’t match against

See the Data Exploration page for documentation on the FROM clause, LIMIT clause, OFFSET clause, and on Regular Expressions in Queries.

Examples

Run a SHOW TAG VALUES query with the ON clause

> SHOW TAG VALUES ON "NOAA_water_database" WITH KEY = "randtag"

name: h2o_quality
key       value
---       -----
randtag   1
randtag   2
randtag   3

The query returns all tag values of the randtag tag key in the NOAA_water_database database. SHOW TAG VALUES groups query results by measurement name.

Run a SHOW TAG VALUES query without the ON clause

Specify the database with USE <database_name>

> USE NOAA_water_database
Using database NOAA_water_database

> SHOW TAG VALUES WITH KEY = "randtag"

name: h2o_quality
key       value
---       -----
randtag   1
randtag   2
randtag   3

Specify the database with the db query string parameter:

~# curl -G "http://localhost:8086/query?db=NOAA_water_database&pretty=true" --data-urlencode 'q=SHOW TAG VALUES WITH KEY = "randtag"'

{
    "results": [
        {
            "statement_id": 0,
            "series": [
                {
                    "name": "h2o_quality",
                    "columns": [
                        "key",
                        "value"
                    ],
                    "values": [
                        [
                            "randtag",
                            "1"
                        ],
                        [
                            "randtag",
                            "2"
                        ],
                        [
                            "randtag",
                            "3"
                        ]
                    ]
                }
            ]
        }
    ]
}

Run a SHOW TAG VALUES query with several clauses

> SHOW TAG VALUES ON "NOAA_water_database" WITH KEY IN ("location","randtag") WHERE "randtag" =~ /./ LIMIT 3

name: h2o_quality
key        value
---        -----
location   coyote_creek
location   santa_monica
randtag	   1

The query returns the tag values of the tag keys location and randtag for all measurements in the NOAA_water_database database where randtag has tag values. The LIMIT clause limits the number of tag values returned to three.

SHOW FIELD KEYS

Returns the field keys and the data type of their field values.

Syntax

SHOW FIELD KEYS [ON <database_name>] [FROM <measurement_name>]

Description of syntax

ON <database_name> is optional. If the query does not include ON <database_name>, you must specify the database with USE <database_name> in the CLI or with the db query string parameter in the InfluxDB API request.

The FROM clause is also optional. See the Data Exploration page for documentation on the FROM clause.

Note: A field’s data type can differ across shards. If your field has more than one type, SHOW FIELD KEYS returns the type that occurs first in the following list: float, integer, string, boolean.

Examples

Run a SHOW FIELD KEYS query with the ON clause

> SHOW FIELD KEYS ON "NOAA_water_database"

name: average_temperature
fieldKey            fieldType
--------            ---------
degrees             float

name: h2o_feet
fieldKey            fieldType
--------            ---------
level description   string
water_level         float

name: h2o_pH
fieldKey            fieldType
--------            ---------
pH                  float

name: h2o_quality
fieldKey            fieldType
--------            ---------
index               float

name: h2o_temperature
fieldKey            fieldType
--------            ---------
degrees             float

The query returns the field keys and field value data types for each measurement in the NOAA_water_database database.

Run a SHOW FIELD KEYS query without the ON clause

Specify the database with USE <database_name>

> USE NOAA_water_database
Using database NOAA_water_database

> SHOW FIELD KEYS

name: average_temperature
fieldKey            fieldType
--------            ---------
degrees             float

name: h2o_feet
fieldKey            fieldType
--------            ---------
level description   string
water_level         float

name: h2o_pH
fieldKey            fieldType
--------            ---------
pH                  float

name: h2o_quality
fieldKey            fieldType
--------            ---------
index               float

name: h2o_temperature
fieldKey            fieldType
--------            ---------
degrees             float

Specify the database with the db query string parameter:

~# curl -G "http://localhost:8086/query?db=NOAA_water_database&pretty=true" --data-urlencode 'q=SHOW FIELD KEYS'

{
    "results": [
        {
            "statement_id": 0,
            "series": [
                {
                    "name": "average_temperature",
                    "columns": [
                        "fieldKey",
                        "fieldType"
                    ],
                    "values": [
                        [
                            "degrees",
                            "float"
                        ]
                    ]
                },
                {
                    "name": "h2o_feet",
                    "columns": [
                        "fieldKey",
                        "fieldType"
                    ],
                    "values": [
                        [
                            "level description",
                            "string"
                        ],
                        [
                            "water_level",
                            "float"
                        ]
                    ]
                },
                {
                    "name": "h2o_pH",
                    "columns": [
                        "fieldKey",
                        "fieldType"
                    ],
                    "values": [
                        [
                            "pH",
                            "float"
                        ]
                    ]
                },
                {
                    "name": "h2o_quality",
                    "columns": [
                        "fieldKey",
                        "fieldType"
                    ],
                    "values": [
                        [
                            "index",
                            "float"
                        ]
                    ]
                },
                {
                    "name": "h2o_temperature",
                    "columns": [
                        "fieldKey",
                        "fieldType"
                    ],
                    "values": [
                        [
                            "degrees",
                            "float"
                        ]
                    ]
                }
            ]
        }
    ]
}

Run a SHOW FIELD KEYS query with the FROM clause

> SHOW FIELD KEYS ON "NOAA_water_database" FROM "h2o_feet"

name: h2o_feet
fieldKey            fieldType
--------            ---------
level description   string
water_level         float

The query returns the fields keys and field value data types for the h2o_feet measurement in the NOAA_water_database database.

Common Issues with SHOW FIELD KEYS

SHOW FIELD KEYS and field type discrepancies

Field value data types cannot differ within a shard but they can differ across shards. SHOW FIELD KEYS returns every data type, across every shard, associated with the field key.

Example

The all_the_types field stores four different data types:

> SHOW FIELD KEYS

name: mymeas
fieldKey        fieldType
--------        ---------
all_the_types   integer
all_the_types   float
all_the_types   string
all_the_types   boolean

Note that SHOW FIELD KEYS handles field type discrepancies differently from SELECT statements. For more information, see the How does InfluxDB handle field type discrepancies across shards?.

SHOW CARDINALITY

SHOW CARDINALITY refers to the group of commands used to estimate or count exactly the cardinality of measurements, series, tag keys, tag key values, and field keys.

For more information on the SHOW CARDINALITY commands, see the InfluxQL reference entry.

SHOW FIELD KEY CARDINALITY

-- show estimated cardinality of the field key set of current database
SHOW FIELD KEY CARDINALITY
-- show exact cardinality on field key set of specified database
SHOW FIELD KEY EXACT CARDINALITY ON mydb

SHOW MEASUREMENT KEY CARDINALITY

-- show estimated cardinality of measurement set on current database
SHOW MEASUREMENT CARDINALITY
-- show exact cardinality of measurement set on specified database
SHOW MEASUREMENT EXACT CARDINALITY ON mydb

SHOW SERIES CARDINALITY

-- show estimated cardinality of the series on current database
SHOW SERIES CARDINALITY
-- show estimated cardinality of the series on specified database
SHOW SERIES CARDINALITY ON mydb
-- show exact series cardinality
SHOW SERIES EXACT CARDINALITY
-- show series cardinality of the series on specified database
SHOW SERIES EXACT CARDINALITY ON mydb

SHOW TAG KEY CARDINALITY

-- show estimated tag key cardinality
SHOW TAG KEY CARDINALITY
-- show exact tag key cardinality
SHOW TAG KEY EXACT CARDINALITY

SHOW TAG VALUES CARDINALITY

-- show estimated tag key values cardinality for a specified tag key
SHOW TAG VALUES CARDINALITY WITH KEY = "myTagKey"
-- show estimated tag key values cardinality for a specified tag key
SHOW TAG VALUES CARDINALITY WITH KEY = "myTagKey"
-- show exact tag key values cardinality for a specified tag key
SHOW TAG VALUES EXACT CARDINALITY WITH KEY = "myTagKey"
-- show exact tag key values cardinality for a specified tag key
SHOW TAG VALUES EXACT CARDINALITY WITH KEY = "myTagKey"

Filter meta queries by time

When you filter meta queries by time, you may see results outside of your specified time. Meta query results are filtered at the shard level, so results can be approximately as granular as your shard group duration. If your time filter spans multiple shards, you’ll get results from all shards with points in the specified time range. To review your shards and timestamps on points in the shard, run SHOW SHARDS. To learn more about shards and their duration, see recommended shard groups durations.

The example below shows how to filter SHOW TAG KEYS by approximately one hour using a 1h shard group duration. To filter other meta data, replace SHOW TAG KEYS with SHOW TAG VALUES, SHOW SERIES, SHOW FIELD KEYS, and so on.

Note: SHOW MEASUREMENTS cannot be filtered by time.

Example filtering SHOW TAG KEYS by time

  1. Specify a shard duration on a new database or alter an existing shard duration. To specify a 1h shard duration when creating a new database, run the following command:

    > CREATE database mydb with duration 7d REPLICATION 1 SHARD DURATION 1h name myRP;
    

    Note: The minimum shard duration is 1h.

  2. Verify the shard duration has the correct time interval (precision) by running the SHOW SHARDS command. The example below shows a shard duration with an hour precision.

    > SHOW SHARDS
    name: mydb
    id database retention_policy shard_group start_time end_time expiry_time owners
    -- -------- ---------------- ----------- ---------- -------- ----------- ------
    > precision h
    
  3. (Optional) Insert sample tag keys. This step is for demonstration purposes. If you already have tag keys (or other meta data) to search for, skip this step.

    // Insert a sample tag called "test_key" into the "test" measurement, and then check the timestamp:
    > INSERT test,test_key=hello value=1
    
    > select * from test
    name: test
    time test_key value
    ---- -------- -----
    434820 hello 1
    
    // Add new tag keys with timestamps one, two, and three hours earlier:
    
    > INSERT test,test_key_1=hello value=1 434819
    > INSERT test,test_key_2=hello value=1 434819
    > INSERT test,test_key_3_=hello value=1 434818
    > INSERT test,test_key_4=hello value=1 434817
    > INSERT test,test_key_5_=hello value=1 434817
    
  4. To find tag keys within a shard duration, run one of the following commands:

    SHOW TAG KEYS ON database-name <WHERE time clause> OR

    SELECT * FROM measurement <WHERE time clause>

    The examples below use test data from step 3.

    //Using data from Step 3, show tag keys between now and an hour ago
    > SHOW TAG KEYS ON mydb where time > now() -1h and time < now()
    name: test
    tagKey
    ------
    test_key
    test_key_1
    test_key_2
    
    // Find tag keys between one and two hours ago
    > SHOW TAG KEYS ON mydb where > time > now() -2h and time < now()-1h
    name: test
    tagKey
    ------
    test_key_1
    test_key_2
    test_key_3
    
    // Find tag keys between two and three hours ago
    > SHOW TAG KEYS ON mydb where > time > now() -3h and time < now()-2h
    name: test
    tagKey
    ------
    test_key_3
    test_key_4
    test_key_5
    
    // For a specified measurement, find tag keys in a given shard by specifying the time boundaries of the shard
    > SELECT * FROM test WHERE time >= '2019-08-09T00:00:00Z' and time < '2019-08-09T10:00:00Z'
    name: test
    time test_key_4 test_key_5 value
    ---- ------------ ------------ -----
    434817 hello 1
    434817 hello 1
    
    // For a specified database, find tag keys in a given shard by specifying the time boundaries of the shard
    > SHOW TAG KEYS ON mydb WHERE time >= '2019-08-09T00:00:00Z' and time < '2019-08-09T10:00:00Z'
    name: test
    tagKey
    ------
    test_key_4
    test_key_5
    

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