Query fields and tags
Use filter() to query data based on fields, tags, or any other column value. filter()
performs operations similar to the SELECT
statement and the WHERE
clause in InfluxQL and other SQL-like query languages.
The filter() function
filter()
has an fn
parameter that expects a predicate function, an anonymous function comprised of one or more predicate expressions. The predicate function evaluates each input row. Rows that evaluate to true
are included in the output data. Rows that evaluate to false
are excluded from the output data.
// ...
|> filter(fn: (r) => r._measurement == "example-measurement-name" )
The fn
predicate function requires an r
argument, which represents each row as filter()
iterates over input data. Key-value pairs in the row record represent columns and their values. Use dot notation or bracket notation to reference specific column values in the predicate function. Use logical operators to chain multiple predicate expressions together.
// Row record
r = {foo: "bar", baz: "quz"}
// Example predicate function
(r) => r.foo == "bar" and r["baz"] == "quz"
// Evaluation results
(r) => true and true
Filter by fields and tags
The combination of from(), range(), and filter()
represent the most basic Flux query:
- Use
from()
to define your bucket. - Use
range()
to limit query results by time. - Use
filter()
to identify what rows of data to output.
from(bucket: "example-bucket")
|> range(start: -1h)
|> filter(fn: (r) => r._measurement == "example-measurement-name" and r.mytagname == "example-tag-value")
|> filter(fn: (r) => r._field == "example-field-name")