SQL Queries
Use SQL queries to aggregate results with operators like count
, mean
and distinct
In addition to simple filter expressions, Seq provides an SQL syntax for more advanced queries. SQL queries in Seq permit:
- Tabular queries -
select
event properties as columns - Aggregate operators like
count
,mean
,distinct
,percentile
andsum
- Time groupings to apply an aggregation over individual time slices
SQL queries enable charting through the view selector that will appear above and to the left of a SQL result set.
Basic Syntax
The syntax of an SQL query in Seq is:
select [<column> [as <label>],]
[from stream
[where <predicate>]
[group by [time(<d>)|<grouping>,]]
[having <predicate>]
[order by [time|<label>] [asc|desc]]
[limit <n>]
[for refresh]]
The from stream
clause indicates the query will run over the event stream currently being viewed, with any active signals used to filter results.
Expressions in a SQL query use SQL-style
'single quoted'
strings and familiar SQL operators such asand
,or
,not
andlike
.
Tabular Queries
The simplest SQL queries pluck properties out of events into columns.
select Method, RequestPath, StatusCode
from stream
where StatusCode > 399
This produces a rowset:
In all queries, when SQL syntax is used, Seq requires that a time range is specified using the date range picker in the Seq web interface. By default the last 24 hours will be included; use the calendar drop down to change the time range and refresh the query.
Tabular queries are great for exporting comma-separated text files from Seq. Use the drop-down beside the refresh button to download results in CSV format.
Limits
Seq automatically limits the size of rowsets that can be computed using SQL queries, and returns an error if a query would exceed the default limit.
To override the limit, specifying a limit
clause will take a subset of results:
select Method, RequestPath, StatusCode
from stream
where StatusCode > 399
limit 100
The limit
clause is specified last, after any conditions or groupings.
Instead of specifying a limit directly, it's usually possible to select a shorter time range using the date picker controls, or group the query at a coarser level.
When a tabular query is executed, options to display the data as a a bar or pie chart will appear to the bottom left of the filter bar. Selecting one of these will display the rowset in a chart of that kind.
Aggregate Operators
Most uses for SQL queries in Seq involve aggregate operators. These provide familiar computations like count
, sum
, min
/max
/mean
/percentile
and distinct
.
select count(*)
from stream
group by RequestPath
This produces a rowset:
View the full list of aggregate operators.
Time-Slicing Queries
Rather than compute aggregates across the entire time range, a time slice grouping can be used.
select mean(Elapsed)
from stream
group by RequestPath, time(1m)
Time slicing expressions can group events by a number of days (d
), hours (h
), minutes (m
), seconds (s
) or milliseconds (ms
).
To retrieve the most-recent results first, specify order by time desc
in the query.
Timeseries Result
The
time()
grouping may be specified last to render the result in timeseries format. Note that in this configuration,limit
clauses will apply to the raw (un-filled) result set, solimit 5
may return more than five rows.
Selecting the timeseries icon to the bottom-left of the filter bar will display the results in a timeseries chart.
Cheat Sheet
Need a handy syntax reference to keep by your desk? We've put together a simple cheat sheet with SQL syntax and operator basics. Download the PDF here.
Updated over 5 years ago