Data Type
Basic Data Type
IoTDB supports the following data types:
- BOOLEAN (Boolean)
- INT32 (Integer)
- INT64 (Long Integer)
- FLOAT (Single Precision Floating Point)
- DOUBLE (Double Precision Floating Point)
- TEXT (String)
Float Precision
The time series of FLOAT and DOUBLE type can specify (MAX_POINT_NUMBER, see this page for more information on how to specify), which is the number of digits after the decimal point of the floating point number, if the encoding method is RLE or TS_2DIFF. If MAX_POINT_NUMBER is not specified, the system will use float_precision in the configuration file iotdb-common.properties
.
CREATE TIMESERIES root.vehicle.d0.s0 WITH DATATYPE=FLOAT, ENCODING=RLE, 'MAX_POINT_NUMBER'='2';
- For Float data value, The data range is (-Integer.MAX_VALUE, Integer.MAX_VALUE), rather than Float.MAX_VALUE, and the max_point_number is 19, caused by the limition of function Math.round(float) in Java.
- For Double data value, The data range is (-Long.MAX_VALUE, Long.MAX_VALUE), rather than Double.MAX_VALUE, and the max_point_number is 19, caused by the limition of function Math.round(double) in Java (Long.MAX_VALUE=9.22E18).
Data Type Compatibility
When the written data type is inconsistent with the data type of time-series,
- If the data type of time-series is not compatible with the written data type, the system will give an error message.
- If the data type of time-series is compatible with the written data type, the system will automatically convert the data type.
The compatibility of each data type is shown in the following table:
Series Data Type | Supported Written Data Types |
---|---|
BOOLEAN | BOOLEAN |
INT32 | INT32 |
INT64 | INT32 INT64 |
FLOAT | INT32 FLOAT |
DOUBLE | INT32 INT64 FLOAT DOUBLE |
TEXT | TEXT |
Timestamp
The timestamp is the time point at which data is produced. It includes absolute timestamps and relative timestamps
Absolute timestamp
Absolute timestamps in IoTDB are divided into two types: LONG and DATETIME (including DATETIME-INPUT and DATETIME-DISPLAY). When a user inputs a timestamp, he can use a LONG type timestamp or a DATETIME-INPUT type timestamp, and the supported formats of the DATETIME-INPUT type timestamp are shown in the table below:
Supported formats of DATETIME-INPUT type timestamp
Format |
---|
yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss |
yyyy/MM/dd HH:mm:ss |
yyyy.MM.dd HH:mm:ss |
yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ssZZ |
yyyy/MM/dd HH:mm:ssZZ |
yyyy.MM.dd HH:mm:ssZZ |
yyyy/MM/dd HH:mm:ss.SSS |
yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss.SSS |
yyyy.MM.dd HH:mm:ss.SSS |
yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss.SSSZZ |
yyyy/MM/dd HH:mm:ss.SSSZZ |
yyyy.MM.dd HH:mm:ss.SSSZZ |
ISO8601 standard time format |
IoTDB can support LONG types and DATETIME-DISPLAY types when displaying timestamps. The DATETIME-DISPLAY type can support user-defined time formats. The syntax of the custom time format is shown in the table below:
The syntax of the custom time format
Symbol | Meaning | Presentation | Examples |
---|---|---|---|
G | era | era | era |
C | century of era (>=0) | number | 20 |
Y | year of era (>=0) | year | 1996 |
x | weekyear | year | 1996 |
w | week of weekyear | number | 27 |
e | day of week | number | 2 |
E | day of week | text | Tuesday; Tue |
y | year | year | 1996 |
D | day of year | number | 189 |
M | month of year | month | July; Jul; 07 |
d | day of month | number | 10 |
a | halfday of day | text | PM |
K | hour of halfday (0~11) | number | 0 |
h | clockhour of halfday (1~12) | number | 12 |
H | hour of day (0~23) | number | 0 |
k | clockhour of day (1~24) | number | 24 |
m | minute of hour | number | 30 |
s | second of minute | number | 55 |
S | fraction of second | millis | 978 |
z | time zone | text | Pacific Standard Time; PST |
Z | time zone offset/id | zone | -0800; -08:00; America/Los_Angeles |
‘ | escape for text | delimiter | |
‘’ | single quote | literal | ‘ |
Relative timestamp
Relative time refers to the time relative to the server time now()
and DATETIME
time.
Syntax:
Duration = (Digit+ ('Y'|'MO'|'W'|'D'|'H'|'M'|'S'|'MS'|'US'|'NS'))+
RelativeTime = (now() | DATETIME) ((+|-) Duration)+
The syntax of the duration unit
Symbol | Meaning | Presentation | Examples |
---|---|---|---|
y | year | 1y=365 days | 1y |
mo | month | 1mo=30 days | 1mo |
w | week | 1w=7 days | 1w |
d | day | 1d=1 day | 1d |
h | hour | 1h=3600 seconds | 1h |
m | minute | 1m=60 seconds | 1m |
s | second | 1s=1 second | 1s |
ms | millisecond | 1ms=1000_000 nanoseconds | 1ms |
us | microsecond | 1us=1000 nanoseconds | 1us |
ns | nanosecond | 1ns=1 nanosecond | 1ns |
eg:
now() - 1d2h //1 day and 2 hours earlier than the current server time
now() - 1w //1 week earlier than the current server time
Note:There must be spaces on the left and right of ‘+’ and ‘-‘.