In IoTDB, SELECT
statement is used to retrieve data from one or more selected time series. Here is the syntax definition of SELECT
statement:
SELECT [LAST] selectExpr [, selectExpr] ... [INTO intoItem [, intoItem] ...] FROM prefixPath [, prefixPath] ... [WHERE whereCondition] [GROUP BY { ([startTime, endTime), interval [, slidingStep]) | LEVEL = levelNum [, levelNum] ... | TAGS(tagKey [, tagKey] ... ) }] [HAVING havingCondition] [ORDER BY sortKey {ASC | DESC}] [FILL ({PREVIOUS | LINEAR | constant})] [SLIMIT seriesLimit] [SOFFSET seriesOffset] [LIMIT rowLimit] [OFFSET rowOffset] [ALIGN BY {TIME | DEVICE}]
SELECT
clauseSELECT
clause specifies the output of the query, consisting of several selectExpr
.selectExpr
defines one or more columns in the query result, which is an expression consisting of time series path suffixes, constants, functions, and operators.AS
to specify aliases for columns in the query result set.LAST
keyword in the SELECT
clause to specify that the query is the last query. For details and examples, see the document Last Query.INTO
clauseSELECT INTO
is used to write query results into a series of specified time series. The INTO
clause specifies the target time series to which query results are written.FROM
clauseFROM
clause contains the path prefix of one or more time series to be queried, and wildcards are supported.FROM
clause and the suffix in the SELECT
clause will be concatenated to obtain a complete query target time series.WHERE
clauseWHERE
clause specifies the filtering conditions for data rows, consisting of a whereCondition
.whereCondition
is a logical expression that evaluates to true for each row to be selected. If there is no WHERE
clause, all rows will be selected.whereCondition
, any IOTDB-supported functions and operators can be used except aggregate functions.GROUP BY
clauseGROUP BY
clause specifies how the time series are aggregated by segment or group.HAVING
clauseHAVING
clause specifies the filter conditions for the aggregation results, consisting of a havingCondition
.havingCondition
is a logical expression that evaluates to true for the aggregation results to be selected. If there is no HAVING
clause, all aggregated results will be selected.HAVING
is to be used with aggregate functions and the GROUP BY
clause.ORDER BY
clauseORDER BY
clause is used to specify how the result set is sorted.ORDER BY TIME DESC
can be used to specify that the result set is sorted in descending order of timestamp.ORDER BY
clause is not supported now.FILL
clauseFILL
clause is used to specify the filling mode in the case of missing data, allowing users to fill in empty values for the result set of any query according to a specific method.SLIMIT
and SOFFSET
clausesSLIMIT
specifies the number of columns of the query result, and SOFFSET
specifies the starting column position of the query result display. SLIMIT
and SOFFSET
are only used to control value columns and have no effect on time and device columns.LIMIT
and OFFSET
clausesLIMIT
specifies the number of rows of the query result, and OFFSET
specifies the starting row position of the query result display.ALIGN BY
clauseThe SQL statement is:
select temperature from root.ln.wf01.wt01 where time < 2017-11-01T00:08:00.000
which means:
The selected device is ln group wf01 plant wt01 device; the selected timeseries is the temperature sensor (temperature). The SQL statement requires that all temperature sensor values before the time point of “2017-11-01T00:08:00.000” be selected.
The execution result of this SQL statement is as follows:
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | Time|root.ln.wf01.wt01.temperature| +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |2017-11-01T00:00:00.000+08:00| 25.96| |2017-11-01T00:01:00.000+08:00| 24.36| |2017-11-01T00:02:00.000+08:00| 20.09| |2017-11-01T00:03:00.000+08:00| 20.18| |2017-11-01T00:04:00.000+08:00| 21.13| |2017-11-01T00:05:00.000+08:00| 22.72| |2017-11-01T00:06:00.000+08:00| 20.71| |2017-11-01T00:07:00.000+08:00| 21.45| +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ Total line number = 8 It costs 0.026s
The SQL statement is:
select status, temperature from root.ln.wf01.wt01 where time > 2017-11-01T00:05:00.000 and time < 2017-11-01T00:12:00.000;
which means:
The selected device is ln group wf01 plant wt01 device; the selected timeseries is “status” and “temperature”. The SQL statement requires that the status and temperature sensor values between the time point of “2017-11-01T00:05:00.000” and “2017-11-01T00:12:00.000” be selected.
The execution result of this SQL statement is as follows:
+-----------------------------+------------------------+-----------------------------+ | Time|root.ln.wf01.wt01.status|root.ln.wf01.wt01.temperature| +-----------------------------+------------------------+-----------------------------+ |2017-11-01T00:06:00.000+08:00| false| 20.71| |2017-11-01T00:07:00.000+08:00| false| 21.45| |2017-11-01T00:08:00.000+08:00| false| 22.58| |2017-11-01T00:09:00.000+08:00| false| 20.98| |2017-11-01T00:10:00.000+08:00| true| 25.52| |2017-11-01T00:11:00.000+08:00| false| 22.91| +-----------------------------+------------------------+-----------------------------+ Total line number = 6 It costs 0.018s
IoTDB supports specifying multiple time interval conditions in a query. Users can combine time interval conditions at will according to their needs. For example, the SQL statement is:
select status,temperature from root.ln.wf01.wt01 where (time > 2017-11-01T00:05:00.000 and time < 2017-11-01T00:12:00.000) or (time >= 2017-11-01T16:35:00.000 and time <= 2017-11-01T16:37:00.000);
which means:
The selected device is ln group wf01 plant wt01 device; the selected timeseries is “status” and “temperature”; the statement specifies two different time intervals, namely “2017-11-01T00:05:00.000 to 2017-11-01T00:12:00.000” and “2017-11-01T16:35:00.000 to 2017-11-01T16:37:00.000”. The SQL statement requires that the values of selected timeseries satisfying any time interval be selected.
The execution result of this SQL statement is as follows:
+-----------------------------+------------------------+-----------------------------+ | Time|root.ln.wf01.wt01.status|root.ln.wf01.wt01.temperature| +-----------------------------+------------------------+-----------------------------+ |2017-11-01T00:06:00.000+08:00| false| 20.71| |2017-11-01T00:07:00.000+08:00| false| 21.45| |2017-11-01T00:08:00.000+08:00| false| 22.58| |2017-11-01T00:09:00.000+08:00| false| 20.98| |2017-11-01T00:10:00.000+08:00| true| 25.52| |2017-11-01T00:11:00.000+08:00| false| 22.91| |2017-11-01T16:35:00.000+08:00| true| 23.44| |2017-11-01T16:36:00.000+08:00| false| 21.98| |2017-11-01T16:37:00.000+08:00| false| 21.93| +-----------------------------+------------------------+-----------------------------+ Total line number = 9 It costs 0.018s
The system supports the selection of data in any column in a query, i.e., the selected columns can come from different devices. For example, the SQL statement is:
select wf01.wt01.status,wf02.wt02.hardware from root.ln where (time > 2017-11-01T00:05:00.000 and time < 2017-11-01T00:12:00.000) or (time >= 2017-11-01T16:35:00.000 and time <= 2017-11-01T16:37:00.000);
which means:
The selected timeseries are “the power supply status of ln group wf01 plant wt01 device” and “the hardware version of ln group wf02 plant wt02 device”; the statement specifies two different time intervals, namely “2017-11-01T00:05:00.000 to 2017-11-01T00:12:00.000” and “2017-11-01T16:35:00.000 to 2017-11-01T16:37:00.000”. The SQL statement requires that the values of selected timeseries satisfying any time interval be selected.
The execution result of this SQL statement is as follows:
+-----------------------------+------------------------+--------------------------+ | Time|root.ln.wf01.wt01.status|root.ln.wf02.wt02.hardware| +-----------------------------+------------------------+--------------------------+ |2017-11-01T00:06:00.000+08:00| false| v1| |2017-11-01T00:07:00.000+08:00| false| v1| |2017-11-01T00:08:00.000+08:00| false| v1| |2017-11-01T00:09:00.000+08:00| false| v1| |2017-11-01T00:10:00.000+08:00| true| v2| |2017-11-01T00:11:00.000+08:00| false| v1| |2017-11-01T16:35:00.000+08:00| true| v2| |2017-11-01T16:36:00.000+08:00| false| v1| |2017-11-01T16:37:00.000+08:00| false| v1| +-----------------------------+------------------------+--------------------------+ Total line number = 9 It costs 0.014s
IoTDB supports the ‘order by time’ statement since 0.11, it's used to display results in descending order by time. For example, the SQL statement is:
select * from root.ln.** where time > 1 order by time desc limit 10;
The execution result of this SQL statement is as follows:
+-----------------------------+--------------------------+------------------------+-----------------------------+------------------------+ | Time|root.ln.wf02.wt02.hardware|root.ln.wf02.wt02.status|root.ln.wf01.wt01.temperature|root.ln.wf01.wt01.status| +-----------------------------+--------------------------+------------------------+-----------------------------+------------------------+ |2017-11-07T23:59:00.000+08:00| v1| false| 21.07| false| |2017-11-07T23:58:00.000+08:00| v1| false| 22.93| false| |2017-11-07T23:57:00.000+08:00| v2| true| 24.39| true| |2017-11-07T23:56:00.000+08:00| v2| true| 24.44| true| |2017-11-07T23:55:00.000+08:00| v2| true| 25.9| true| |2017-11-07T23:54:00.000+08:00| v1| false| 22.52| false| |2017-11-07T23:53:00.000+08:00| v2| true| 24.58| true| |2017-11-07T23:52:00.000+08:00| v1| false| 20.18| false| |2017-11-07T23:51:00.000+08:00| v1| false| 22.24| false| |2017-11-07T23:50:00.000+08:00| v2| true| 23.7| true| +-----------------------------+--------------------------+------------------------+-----------------------------+------------------------+ Total line number = 10 It costs 0.016s
Data query statements can be used in SQL command-line terminals, JDBC, JAVA / C++ / Python / Go and other native APIs, and RESTful APIs.
Execute the query statement in the SQL command line terminal: start the SQL command line terminal, and directly enter the query statement to execute, see SQL command line terminal.
Execute query statements in JDBC, see JDBC for details.
Execute query statements in native APIs such as JAVA / C++ / Python / Go. For details, please refer to the relevant documentation in the Application Programming Interface chapter. The interface prototype is as follows:
SessionDataSet executeQueryStatement(String sql)
Used in RESTful API, see HTTP API for details.