influxd generate help-schema
The influxd generate help-schema
command outputs an example TOML schema to stdout that includes descriptions of available options. See example output below. Use custom TOML schema files to generate sample data sets with influxd generate
.
Usage
influxd generate help-schema [flags]
Flags
Flag | Description | Input Type | |
---|---|---|---|
—print | Print data spec and exit | ||
—org | Organization name | string | |
—bucket | Bucket name | string | |
—start-time | Start time (YYYY-MM-DDT00:00:00Z ) (default is 00:00:00 of one week ago) | string | |
—end-time | End time (YYYY-MM-DDT00:00:00Z ) (default is 00:00:00 of current day) | string | |
—clean | Clean time series data files (none , tsm or all ) (default none ) | string | |
—cpuprofile | Collect a CPU profile | string | |
—memprofile | Collect a memory profile | string | |
-h | —help | Help for the help-schema command |
Example output
title = "Documented schema"
# limit the maximum number of series generated across all measurements
#
# series-limit: integer, optional (default: unlimited)
[[measurements]]
# name of measurement
#
# NOTE:
# Multiple definitions of the same measurement name are allowed and
# will be merged together.
name = "cpu"
# sample: float; where 0 < sample ≤ 1.0 (default: 0.5)
# sample a subset of the tag set
#
# sample 25% of the tags
#
sample = 0.25
# Keys for defining a tag
#
# name: string, required
# Name of field
#
# source: array<string> or object
#
# A literal array of string values defines the tag values.
#
# An object defines more complex generators. The type key determines the
# type of generator.
#
# source types:
#
# type: "sequence"
# generate a sequence of tag values
#
# format: string
# a format string for the values (default: "value%s")
# start: int (default: 0)
# beginning value
# count: int, required
# ending value
#
# type: "file"
# generate a sequence of tag values from a file source.
# The data in the file is sorted, deduplicated and verified is valid UTF-8
#
# path: string
# absolute path or relative path to current toml file
tags = [
# example sequence tag source. The range of values are automatically
# prefixed with 0s
# to ensure correct sort behavior.
{ name = "host", source = { type = "sequence", format = "host-%s", start = 0, count = 5 } },
# tags can also be sourced from a file. The path is relative to the
# schema.toml.
# Each value must be on a new line. The file is also sorted, deduplicated
# and UTF-8 validated.
{ name = "rack", source = { type = "file", path = "files/racks.txt" } },
# Example string array source, which is also deduplicated and sorted
{ name = "region", source = ["us-west-01","us-west-02","us-east"] },
]
# Keys for defining a field
#
# name: string, required
# Name of field
#
# count: int, required
# The maximum number of values to generate. When multiple fields
# have the same count and time-spec, they will share timestamps.
#
# A time-spec can be either time-precision or time-interval, which
# determines how timestamps are generated and may also influence
# the time range and number of values generated.
#
# time-precision: string [ns, us, ms, s, m, h] (default: ms)
# Specifies the precision (rounding) for generated timestamps.
#
# If the precision results in fewer than "count" intervals for the
# given time range, the number of values will be reduced.
#
# Example:
# count = 1000, start = 0s, end = 100s, time-precison = s
# 100 values will be generated at [0s, 1s, 2s, ..., 99s]
#
# If the precision results in greater than "count" intervals for the
# given time range, the interval will be rounded to the nearest multiple of
# time-precision.
#
# Example:
# count = 10, start = 0s, end = 100s, time-precison = s
# 100 values will be generated at [0s, 10s, 20s, ..., 90s]
#
# time-interval: Go duration string (eg 90s, 1h30m)
# Specifies the delta between generated timestamps.
#
# If the delta results in fewer than "count" intervals for the
# given time range, the number of values will be reduced.
#
# Example:
# count = 100, start = 0s, end = 100s, time-interval = 10s
# 10 values will be generated at [0s, 10s, 20s, ..., 90s]
#
# If the delta results in greater than "count" intervals for the
# given time range, the start-time will be adjusted to ensure "count" values.
#
# Example:
# count = 20, start = 0s, end = 1000s, time-interval = 10s
# 20 values will be generated at [800s, 810s, ..., 900s, ..., 990s]
#
# source: int, float, boolean, string, array or object
#
# A literal int, float, boolean or string will produce
# a constant value of the same data type.
#
# A literal array of homogeneous values will generate a repeating
# sequence.
#
# An object defines more complex generators. The type key determines the
# type of generator.
#
# source types:
#
# type: "rand<float>"
# generate random float values
# seed: seed to random number generator (default: 0)
# min: minimum value (default: 0.0)
# max: maximum value (default: 1.0)
#
# type: "zipf<integer>"
# generate random integer values using a Zipf distribution
# The generator generates values k ∈ [0, imax] such that P(k)
# is proportional to (v + k) ** (-s). Requirements: s > 1 and v ≥ 1.
# See https://golang.org/pkg/math/rand/#NewZipf for more information.
#
# seed: seed to random number generator (default: 0)
# s: float > 1 (required)
# v: float ≥ 1 (required)
# imax: integer (required)
#
fields = [
# Example constant float
{ name = "system", count = 5000, source = 2.5 },
# Example random floats
{ name = "user", count = 5000, source = { type = "rand<float>", seed = 10, min = 0.0, max = 1.0 } },
]
# Multiple measurements may be defined.
[[measurements]]
name = "mem"
tags = [
{ name = "host", source = { type = "sequence", format = "host-%s", start = 0, count = 5 } },
{ name = "region", source = ["us-west-01","us-west-02","us-east"] },
]
fields = [
# An example of a sequence of integer values
{ name = "free", count = 100, source = [10,15,20,25,30,35,30], time-precision = "ms" },
{ name = "low_mem", count = 100, source = [false,true,true], time-precision = "ms" },
]