Documentation

Troubleshoot queries

Troubleshoot SQL and InfluxQL queries that return unexpected results.

Why doesn’t my query return data?

If a query doesn’t return any data, it might be due to the following:

  • Your data falls outside the time range (or other conditions) in the query–for example, the InfluxQL SHOW TAG VALUES command uses a default time range of 1 day.

  • The query (InfluxDB server) timed out.

  • The query client timed out.

  • The query return type is not supported by the client library. For example, array or list types may not be supported. In this case, use array_to_string() to convert the array value to a string–for example:

    SELECT array_to_string(array_agg([1, 2, 3]), ', ')
    
    • Copy
    • Fill window

If a query times out or returns an error, it might be due to the following:

  • a bad request
  • a server or network problem
  • it queries too much data

Understand Arrow Flight responses and error messages for queries.

Optimize slow or expensive queries

If a query is slow or uses too many compute resources, limit the amount of data that it queries.

See how to optimize queries.

Analyze your queries

Use the following tools to retrieve system query information, analyze query execution, and find performance bottlenecks:

Request help to troubleshoot queries

Some bottlenecks may result from suboptimal query execution plans and are outside your control–for example:

  • Sorting (ORDER BY) data that is already sorted
  • Retrieving numerous small Parquet files from the object store, instead of fewer, larger files
  • Querying many overlapped Parquet files
  • Performing a high number of table scans

If you’ve followed steps to optimize and troubleshoot a query, but it still doesn’t meet performance requirements, request help troubleshooting. Customers with an InfluxDB Cloud Serverless annual or support contract can contact InfluxData Support for assistance.

Query trace logging

Currently, customers cannot enable trace logging for InfluxDB Cloud Serverless clusters. InfluxData engineers can use query plans and trace logging to help pinpoint performance bottlenecks in a query.

If you’ve followed steps to optimize and troubleshoot a query, but it still doesn’t meet performance requirements, request help troubleshooting. Customers with an InfluxDB Cloud Serverless annual or support contract can contact InfluxData Support for assistance.


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The future of Flux

Flux is going into maintenance mode. You can continue using it as you currently are without any changes to your code.

Read more

InfluxDB 3 Core and Enterprise are now in Beta

InfluxDB 3 Core and Enterprise are now available for beta testing, available under MIT or Apache 2 license.

InfluxDB 3 Core is a high-speed, recent-data engine that collects and processes data in real-time, while persisting it to local disk or object storage. InfluxDB 3 Enterprise is a commercial product that builds on Core’s foundation, adding high availability, read replicas, enhanced security, and data compaction for faster queries. A free tier of InfluxDB 3 Enterprise will also be available for at-home, non-commercial use for hobbyists to get the full historical time series database set of capabilities.

For more information, check out:

InfluxDB Cloud Serverless