I need a little help here with Grafana...
I am trying to make a single stat which will be showing result from the query. The challenge for me here is that part of the query must be one of the fixed values (numbers) which user would select from menu picture. If user select Current Shift, value to query would be for example today, from 6:00 - 14:00.
Then pass the value to variable that query would use to limit range of data (for example in flux datasource).
I use Grafana 6.5.2 and Influxdb 1.7.9.
Attching menu example
Attaching query, looking to input range
|> range(start:2018-05-22T23:30:00Z, stop: 2018-05-23T00:00:00Z)
Appreciate help,
Salvq
Related
I have a Postgresql DataSource with the following table:
It's kinda logs. All I want is to show on a chart how many successful records (with http_status == 200) do I have per each hour. Sounds simple, right? I wrote this query:
SELECT
count(http_status) AS "suuccess_total_count_per_hour",
date_trunc('hour', created_at) "log_date"
FROM logs
WHERE
http_status = 200
GROUP BY log_date
ORDER BY log_date
It gives me the following result:
Looks good to me. I'm going ahead and trying to put it into Grafana:
Ok, I get it, I have to help Grafana to understand where is the field for time count.
I go to Query Builder and I see that it breaks me query at all. And since that moment I got lost completely. Here is the Query Builder screen:
How to explain to Grafana what do I want? I want just a simple chart like:
Sorry for the rough picture, but I think you got the idea. Thanks for any help.
Your time column (e.g. created_at) should be TIMESTAMP WITH TIME ZONE type*
Use time condition, Grafana has macro so it will be easy, e.g. WHERE $__timeFilter(created_at)
You want to have hourly grouping, so you need to write select for that. Again Grafana has macro: $__timeGroupAlias(created_at,1h,0)
So final Grafana SQL query (not tested, so it may need some minor tweaks):
SELECT
$__timeGroupAlias(created_at,1h,0),
count(*) AS value,
'succcess_total_count_per_hour' as metric
FROM logs
WHERE
$__timeFilter(created_at)
AND http_status = 200
GROUP BY 1
ORDER BY 1
*See Grafana doc: https://grafana.com/docs/grafana/latest/datasources/postgres/
There are documented macros. There are also macros for the case, when your time column is UNIX timestamp.
I created a SQL query that counts the number of servers running test jobs on a specific Jenkins server at a specified time. I'm trying to chart it on Grafana but for some reason, it's displaying the value as NaN.
The data source is a MySQL server. I'm running Grafana version 8.1.5. I went on the server (phpMyAdmin) to check the results of the query and I can see numbers.
When we look at the grafana chart/panel, the bars on the chart look like it matches the values, but the chart shows NaN instead of the value.
What setting do I need to change so that it can print the numeric value on the chart instead of displaying NaN?
EDIT: Looks like I didn't include enough info to my question.
Here's the query that's used, although, I don't know how feasible it is to include the tables with data to demo the issue:
SELECT COUNT(DISTINCT(tb_name)) as val, jenkins FROM (
SELECT
hw.collected_date AS mytime,
hw.jenkins AS jenkins,
hw.name AS tb_name
FROM hw_report as hw LEFT OUTER JOIN jenkins_owner jo
ON hw.jenkins = jo.jenkins
WHERE jo.org IN ('Enterprise Readiness')) as y
WHERE mytime = '2021-12-03 00:00:00'
GROUP BY jenkins
HAVING count(distinct(tb_name)) > '0'
Here are screenshots of my panel. The "Show values" setting is set to "Always", which II assume should show the values.
One thing I noticed is when I hover over the bar, it shows
COUNT(DISTINCT(name_cnt))
instead of a numeric value. Not sure if this is indicative of anything. I checked other charts in the dashboard that someone created and their bars either have a numeric value or it's just a column name (like name_cnt)
Sorry I'm a noob and didn't know what to configure, look up, or mention in my question. I accidentally came across the answer.
So it seems like I need to select something under the "Transform" tab for the panel. Calculation needs to be "Total" instead of "Count" and I need to hide the fields specified in my SQL query and show the "Total"
I am using influx DB and grafana to display some data. There are frequently power outages where it will display null data. I want to create a single stat panel that will display the time since the last null value.
When editing the single stat I know about the "Time of last point" and the unit "from now" under options, but I seem to be having trouble with figuring out what the actual query should be to get a time displayed.
Right now my query is:
SELECT ("value") FROM "measurement"
WHERE ("host" = 'IP.ADDRESS' AND "and" = 'null') AND $timeFilter
GROUP BY time(365d) fill(null)
Where value, measurement, and IP.ADDRESS are all filled in with the correct information.
I know what I have is wrong, but I am not sure what to put.
Ideally what I am trying to say in the query is display the last time since the value displayed on grafana was null in the last 365 days.
I have a query from another thread which goes through a list of different events and pulls out the most recent event and puts it into a list. The code I'm using is:
SELECT Cleaning1, Max(Date1) AS most_recent
FROM CleaningLog
GROUP BY Cleaning1;
Cleaning1 is the column that has the different cleanings, and Date1 is the column that has the date the cleaning occurred, and CleaningLog is the name of the table. I currently have a macro in Access which is an OpenQuery, query. I am having it open the above query, and then having it view as a data sheet and it's in edit mode.
What I am stuck on, is getting a subsequent macro/query/vba code to take the datasheet the query produces and going through each item and determining if they're over due to be cleaned. I tried having a Make Table query, but the problem is, there is no user friendly way to refresh that table without having to delete it (I am having unskilled workers use this Access sheet).
I am wondering if there's a way to look at the most recent cleaning's date, what the query produces, and filter the dates out that are over due for a cleaning, specified by a parameter. I have been looking at this webpage to start playing with the notation, but I haven't been able to come up with much that is useful.
https://support.office.com/en-us/article/Examples-of-query-criteria-3197228C-8684-4552-AC03-ABA746FB29D8
Another problem that I am encountering is that each cleaning doesn't have the same time frame in which is needs to be cleaned.
Thank you in advance for any help!!
You should just be able to modify the query above to show entries with a max date lower than they should be. Below shows entries that haven't been cleaned in 30 days, for instance.
SELECT Cleaning1, Max(Date1) AS most_recent
FROM CleaningLog
GROUP BY Cleaning1
HAVING Max(Date1) < Now() - 30;
I want to set the default range on a date filter to show me the last 10 days - so basically looking at the lastDate (max date) in the data and default filtering only on the last 10 days (maxDate - 10)
How it looks now:
I still would want to the see the entire range bar on the dashboard and give the user the ability to modify the selected range if he wants to. The maxDate changes after every data refresh so it has to be some sort of a condition that is applied to the filter.
How I want it to look (by default after every refresh of data - new dates coming in):
Any suggestions on how this can be done? I know I can use the relative date and show the data for last 10 days but that would modify the filter and create a drop down which I don't want.
Any suggestions are welcome!
One simple approach that does most of what you want is the following:
Create an integer valued parameter with a range from 1 to some max
you choose, say 100. Call it say num_days.
Show the parameter control on your dashboard as a slider, and give
it a nice title like "Number of days to display"
Create a boolean calculated field called Within_Day_Range defined as:
datediff('minute', [My_Date_Field], now()) < [num_days] * 24 * 60
Put Within_Day_Range on the filter shelf and select the value true.
This lets the user easily select how many days in the past to include, and works to the granularity of minutes (i.e. the last two days really means the last 48 hours, not starting at midnight yesterday). Adjust the calculated field if you want different behavior.
The main drawback of this approach as described so far is that it doesn't display the earliest date possible in the database because that is filtered out. Quick filters do an initial query to get the bounds, which has a performance cost -- so using the approach described here can avoid that query and thus load faster.
If you really need that information on your dashboard, you could create a different worksheet to get just the min([My_Date_Field]) and display that near your parameter control.