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2.2 KiB
2.2 KiB
id | title | sidebar_label |
---|---|---|
timeboundaryquery | TimeBoundary queries | TimeBoundary |
Time boundary queries return the earliest and latest data points of a data set. The grammar is:
{
"queryType" : "timeBoundary",
"dataSource": "sample_datasource",
"bound" : < "maxTime" | "minTime" > # optional, defaults to returning both timestamps if not set
"filter" : { "type": "and", "fields": [<filter>, <filter>, ...] } # optional
}
There are 3 main parts to a time boundary query:
property | description | required? |
---|---|---|
queryType | This String should always be "timeBoundary"; this is the first thing Apache Druid (incubating) 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 for more information. | yes |
bound | Optional, set to maxTime or minTime to return only the latest or earliest timestamp. Default to returning both if not set |
no |
filter | See Filters | no |
context | See Context | no |
The format of the result is:
[ {
"timestamp" : "2013-05-09T18:24:00.000Z",
"result" : {
"minTime" : "2013-05-09T18:24:00.000Z",
"maxTime" : "2013-05-09T18:37:00.000Z"
}
} ]