--- layout: doc_page --- # Segment Metadata Queries Segment metadata queries return per segment information about: * Cardinality of all columns in the segment * Estimated byte size for the segment columns if they were stored in a flat format * Interval the segment covers * Column type of all the columns in the segment * Estimated total segment byte size in if it was stored in a flat format * Segment id ```json { "queryType":"segmentMetadata", "dataSource":"sample_datasource", "intervals":["2013-01-01/2014-01-01"] } ``` There are several main parts to a segment metadata query: |property|description|required?| |--------|-----------|---------| |queryType|This String should always be "segmentMetadata"; this is the first thing Druid looks at to figure out how to interpret the query|yes| |dataSource|A String or Object defining the data source to query, very similar to a table in a relational database. See [DataSource](../querying/datasource.html) for more information.|yes| |intervals|A JSON Object representing ISO-8601 Intervals. This defines the time ranges to run the query over.|no| |toInclude|A JSON Object representing what columns should be included in the result. Defaults to "all".|no| |merge|Merge all individual segment metadata results into a single result|no| |context|See [Context](../querying/query-context.html)|no| |analysisTypes|A list of Strings specifying what column properties (e.g. cardinality, size) should be calculated and returned in the result. Defaults to ["cardinality", "size"]. See section [analysisTypes](#analysistypes) for more details.|no| The format of the result is: ```json [ { "id" : "some_id", "intervals" : [ "2013-05-13T00:00:00.000Z/2013-05-14T00:00:00.000Z" ], "columns" : { "__time" : { "type" : "LONG", "size" : 407240380, "cardinality" : null }, "dim1" : { "type" : "STRING", "size" : 100000, "cardinality" : 1944 }, "dim2" : { "type" : "STRING", "size" : 100000, "cardinality" : 1504 }, "metric1" : { "type" : "FLOAT", "size" : 100000, "cardinality" : null } }, "size" : 300000 } ] ``` Dimension columns will have type `STRING`. Metric columns will have type `FLOAT` or `LONG` or name of the underlying complex type such as `hyperUnique` in case of COMPLEX metric. Timestamp column will have type `LONG`. Only columns which are dimensions (ie, have type `STRING`) will have any cardinality. Rest of the columns (timestamp and metric columns) will show cardinality as `null`. ### intervals If an interval is not specified, the query will use a default interval that spans a configurable period before the end time of the most recent segment. The length of this default time period is set in the broker configuration via: druid.query.segmentMetadata.defaultHistory ### toInclude There are 3 types of toInclude objects. #### All The grammar is as follows: ``` json "toInclude": { "type": "all"} ``` #### None The grammar is as follows: ``` json "toInclude": { "type": "none"} ``` #### List The grammar is as follows: ``` json "toInclude": { "type": "list", "columns": []} ``` ### analysisTypes This is a list of properties that determines the amount of information returned about the columns, i.e. analyses to be performed on the columns. By default, all analysis types will be used. If a property is not needed, omitting it from this list will result in a more efficient query. There are 2 types of column analyses: #### cardinality * Estimated floor of cardinality for each column. Only relevant for dimension columns. #### size * Estimated byte size for the segment columns if they were stored in a flat format * Estimated total segment byte size in if it was stored in a flat format