Python client library
This page documents an earlier version of InfluxDB. InfluxDB v2.7 is the latest stable version. View this page in the v2.7 documentation.
Use the InfluxDB Python client library to integrate InfluxDB into Python scripts and applications.
This guide presumes some familiarity with Python and InfluxDB. If just getting started, see Get started with InfluxDB.
Before you begin
Install the InfluxDB Python library:
pip install influxdb-client
Ensure that InfluxDB is running. If running InfluxDB locally, visit http://localhost:8086. (If using InfluxDB Cloud, visit the URL of your InfluxDB Cloud UI. For example: https://us-west-2-1.aws.cloud2.influxdata.com.)
Write data to InfluxDB with Python
We are going to write some data in line protocol using the Python library.
In your Python program, import the InfluxDB client library and use it to write data to InfluxDB.
import influxdb_client
from influxdb_client.client.write_api import SYNCHRONOUS
Define a few variables with the name of your bucket, organization, and token.
bucket = "<my-bucket>"
org = "<my-org>"
token = "<my-token>"
# Store the URL of your InfluxDB instance
url="http://localhost:8086"
Instantiate the client. The
InfluxDBClient
object takes three named parameters:url
,org
, andtoken
. Pass in the named parameters.client = influxdb_client.InfluxDBClient(
url=url,
token=token,
org=org
)
The
InfluxDBClient
object has awrite_api
method used for configuration.Instantiate a write client using the
client
object and thewrite_api
method. Use thewrite_api
method to configure the writer object.write_api = client.write_api(write_options=SYNCHRONOUS)
Create a point object and write it to InfluxDB using the
write
method of the API writer object. The write method requires three parameters:bucket
,org
, andrecord
.p = influxdb_client.Point("my_measurement").tag("location", "Prague").field("temperature", 25.3)
write_api.write(bucket=bucket, org=org, record=p)
Complete example write script
import influxdb_client
from influxdb_client.client.write_api import SYNCHRONOUS
bucket = "<my-bucket>"
org = "<my-org>"
token = "<my-token>"
# Store the URL of your InfluxDB instance
url="http://localhost:8086"
client = influxdb_client.InfluxDBClient(
url=url,
token=token,
org=org
)
write_api = client.write_api(write_options=SYNCHRONOUS)
p = influxdb_client.Point("my_measurement").tag("location", "Prague").field("temperature", 25.3)
write_api.write(bucket=bucket, org=org, record=p)
Query data from InfluxDB with Python
Instantiate the query client.
query_api = client.query_api()
Create a Flux query, and then format it as a Python string.
query = ' from(bucket:"my-bucket")\
|> range(start: -10m)\
|> filter(fn:(r) => r._measurement == "my_measurement")\
|> filter(fn: (r) => r.location == "Prague")\
|> filter(fn:(r) => r._field == "temperature" ) '
The query client sends the Flux query to InfluxDB and returns a Flux object with a table structure.
Pass the
query()
method two named parameters:org
andquery
.result = query_api.query(org=org, query=query)
Iterate through the tables and records in the Flux object.
- Use the
get_value()
method to return values. - Use the
get_field()
method to return fields.
results = []
for table in result:
for record in table.records:
results.append((record.get_field(), record.get_value()))
print(results)
[(temperature, 25.3)]
- Use the
The Flux object provides the following methods for accessing your data:
get_measurement()
: Returns the measurement name of the record.get_field()
: Returns the field name.get_value()
: Returns the actual field value.values
: Returns a map of column values.values.get("<your tag>")
: Returns a value from the record for given column.get_time()
: Returns the time of the record.get_start()
: Returns the inclusive lower time bound of all records in the current table.get_stop()
: Returns the exclusive upper time bound of all records in the current table.
Complete example query script
query_api = client.query_api()
query = ‘ from(bucket:"my-bucket")\
|> range(start: -10m)\
|> filter(fn:(r) => r._measurement == "my_measurement")\
|> filter(fn: (r) => r.location == "Prague")\
|> filter(fn:(r) => r._field == "temperature" )‘
result = query_api.query(org=org, query=query)
results = []
for table in result:
for record in table.records:
results.append((record.get_field(), record.get_value()))
print(results)
[(temperature, 25.3)]
For more information, see the Python client README on GitHub.