druid/docs/content/GroupByQuery.md

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---
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layout: doc_page
---
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# groupBy Queries
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These types of queries take a groupBy query object and return an array of JSON objects where each object represents a grouping asked for by the query. Note: If you only want to do straight aggreagates for some time range, we highly recommend using [TimeseriesQueries](TimeseriesQuery.html) instead. The performance will be substantially better.
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An example groupBy query object is shown below:
``` json
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{
"queryType": "groupBy",
"dataSource": "sample_datasource",
"granularity": "day",
"dimensions": ["dim1", "dim2"],
"limitSpec": { "type": "default", "limit": 5000, "columns": ["dim1", "metric1"] },
"filter": {
"type": "and",
"fields": [
{ "type": "selector", "dimension": "sample_dimension1", "value": "sample_value1" },
{ "type": "or",
"fields": [
{ "type": "selector", "dimension": "sample_dimension2", "value": "sample_value2" },
{ "type": "selector", "dimension": "sample_dimension3", "value": "sample_value3" }
]
}
]
},
"aggregations": [
{ "type": "longSum", "name": "sample_name1", "fieldName": "sample_fieldName1" },
{ "type": "doubleSum", "name": "sample_name2", "fieldName": "sample_fieldName2" }
],
"postAggregations": [
{ "type": "arithmetic",
"name": "sample_divide",
"fn": "/",
"fields": [
{ "type": "fieldAccess", "name": "sample_name1", "fieldName": "sample_fieldName1" },
{ "type": "fieldAccess", "name": "sample_name2", "fieldName": "sample_fieldName2" }
]
}
],
"intervals": [ "2012-01-01T00:00:00.000/2012-01-03T00:00:00.000" ],
"having": { "type": "greaterThan", "aggregation": "sample_name1", "value": 0 }
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}
```
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There are 9 main parts to a groupBy query:
|property|description|required?|
|--------|-----------|---------|
|queryType|This String should always be "groupBy"; this is the first thing Druid looks at to figure out how to interpret the query|yes|
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|dataSource|A String defining the data source to query, very similar to a table in a relational database|yes|
|dimensions|A JSON list of dimensions to do the groupBy over|yes|
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|orderBy|See [OrderBy](OrderBy.html).|no|
|having|See [Having](Having.html).|no|
|granularity|Defines the granularity of the query. See [Granularities](Granularities.html)|yes|
|filter|See [Filters](Filters.html)|no|
|aggregations|See [Aggregations](Aggregations.html)|yes|
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|postAggregations|See [Post Aggregations](Post-Aggregations.html)|no|
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|intervals|A JSON Object representing ISO-8601 Intervals. This defines the time ranges to run the query over.|yes|
|context|An additional JSON Object which can be used to specify certain flags.|no|
To pull it all together, the above query would return *n\*m* data points, up to a maximum of 5000 points, where n is the cardinality of the "dim1" dimension, m is the cardinality of the "dim2" dimension, each day between 2012-01-01 and 2012-01-03, from the "sample_datasource" table. Each data point contains the (long) sum of sample_fieldName1 if the value of the data point is greater than 0, the (double) sum of sample_fieldName2 and the (double) the result of sample_fieldName1 divided by sample_fieldName2 for the filter set for a particular grouping of "dim1" and "dim2". The output looks like this:
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```json
[
{
"version" : "v1",
"timestamp" : "2012-01-01T00:00:00.000Z",
"event" : {
"dim1" : <some_dim_value_one>,
"dim2" : <some_dim_value_two>,
"sample_name1" : <some_sample_name_value_one>,
"sample_name2" :<some_sample_name_value_two>,
"sample_divide" : <some_sample_divide_value>
}
},
{
"version" : "v1",
"timestamp" : "2012-01-01T00:00:00.000Z",
"event" : {
"dim1" : <some_other_dim_value_one>,
"dim2" : <some_other_dim_value_two>,
"sample_name1" : <some_other_sample_name_value_one>,
"sample_name2" :<some_other_sample_name_value_two>,
"sample_divide" : <some_other_sample_divide_value>
}
},
...
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]
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```