sysdbql(7) ========== :doctype: manpage NAME ---- sysdbql - the SysDB query language SYNOPSIS -------- LIST hosts; FETCH host 'some.host.name'; LOOKUP hosts MATCHING attribute.architecture = 'amd64' FILTER :age < 5 * :interval; DESCRIPTION ----------- include::sysdb-description.txt[] The SysDB query language is a human-readable format for describing a request to retrieve data from a SysDB daemon. It is very remotely similar to the Standard Query Language (SQL) supported by relational database management systems (RDBMS) but specialized for SysDB's use-case. QUERY COMMANDS -------------- Each command is terminated by a semicolon. The following commands are available to retrieve information from SysDB: *LIST* hosts [*FILTER* '']:: Retrieve a sorted (by name) list of all hosts currently stored in SysDB. The return value is a list of hosts where each host specification includes its name, the timestamp of the last update of the object known to SysDB and an approximation of the interval with which the host was updated. If a filter condition is specified, only objects matching that filter will be included in the reply. See the section "FILTER clause" for more details about how to specify the search and filter conditions. *FETCH* host '' [*FILTER* '']:: Retrieve detailed information about the specified host object. The return value includes the hostname, a list of services referenced by the host, and a list of attributes for the host and each service. If the host does not exist, an error is returned. If a filter condition is specified, only objects matching that filter will be included in the reply. See the section "FILTER clause" for more details about how to specify the search and filter conditions. *LOOKUP* hosts *MATCHING* '' [*FILTER* '']:: Retrieve detailed information about all host objects matching the specified search condition. The return value is a list of detailed information for each matching host providing the same details as returned by the *FETCH* command. If no host matches the search criteria, it's not considered an error. Instead, an empty list is returned. If a filter condition is specified, only objects matching that filter will be included in the reply. See the sections "MATCHING clause" and "FILTER clause" for more details about how to specify the search and filter conditions. *TIMESERIES* ''.'' [START ''] [END '']:: Retrieve a time-series for the specified host's metric. The data is retrieved from a backend data-store based on information provided by the respective query plugin. The return value includes the actual start and end time of the time-series and one or multiple sequences of time-stamp / value pairs. If the metric does not exist or if the backend data-store is not supported, an error is returned. MATCHING clause ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The *MATCHING* clause in a query specifies a boolean expression which is used to match host objects based on their names, their attributes, or services referenced by the host. Each *MATCHING* clause may be made up of one or multiple subexpressions each matching on one criteria. The following subexpressions are supported by SysDB: '' '' '':: Match a named field against the specified value. See below for what fields and operators are supported. *NOT* '':: Invert the boolean result of the specified subexpression. '' *AND* '':: '' *OR* '':: Combine multiple subexpressions using logical AND or logical OR. The following fields may be queried: *host*:: The full name of the host. *service*:: The full service name as referenced by the host. *attribute*:: The full name of a host attribute. *attribute.*'':: The value of the named host attribute. If an attribute of the specified does not exist, each comparison is treated as if the value does not match. See the documentation for the *IS NULL* and *IS NOT NULL* operators for ways to check if an attribute exists. '' may either be a string (when matching by object names) or match the type of the attribute's value (when matching attribute values). Attribute values may either be a string, integer, decimal number, or a date-time value (booleans and binary data are not supported by the frontend yet). See the section "DATA TYPES" for more details about how specify each data-type. When comparing an attribute's value using a regular expression matcher, the value will be cast to a string before doing so. No other casts are supported at this time. The following operators may be used to match field values: *=*:: Evaluates to true if the field value exactly matches the specified value. *!=*:: Evaluates to true if the field value does not match the exact specified value. *=~*:: Evaluates to true if the field value matches the specified regular expression. SysDB uses POSIX extended regular expressions. *!~*:: Evalues to true if the field value does not match the specified regular expression. The following operators may be used, in addition, to match attribute values: *<*, *\<=*, *>=*, *>*:: Evaluates to true if the attribute value is less than, less than or equal to, greater than or equal to or greater than the specified value. In addition, a named attribute may be checked for existence using the *IS NULL* and *IS NOT NULL* operators. An attribute is considered to be *NULL* if it is not set for a host. FILTER clause ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The *FILTER* clause in a query specifies a boolean expression which is used to filter objects included in the query's response. The filter is applied to hosts, services, and attributes alike and, thus, will usually be based on the core properties of the stored objects. The basic syntax for filter clauses is the same as for matching clauses (see the description about subexpressions above). The following fields (core properties) of stored objects may be queried: *:last_update*:: The timestamp of the last update of the object. This value is based on information provided by the queried backend if possible. *:age*:: The amount of time since the last update of the object. *:interval*:: The interval with which the object gets updated. This value is determined automatically based on a moving average determined from the update timestamps of an object. It depends on the update timestamps as provided by the backend (if available) and SysDB's query interval. *:backend*:: The name of the backend (plugin) providing the data. The type of the *last_update*, *age*, and *interval* fields is date-time and the type of the *backend* field is string. All conditional operators may be used to compare the date-time fields (but not regular expression or *IS NULL* operators). The backend field may only be matched by (in)equality. Each object may be provided by multiple backends. The filter matches if the specified value matches any of them. DATA TYPES ---------- The SysDB query language natively supports various data-types. Constants of all types may be used in any place where a value is expected. *String constants*:: A string constant is an arbitrary sequence of characters enclosed in single quotes ('''). Single quotes may be included in a string constant by specifying two adjacent single quotes. *Integer constants*:: An integer constant may be specified either as a sequence of digits or in scientific notation written in the form "'a' E 'b'" (without spaces) where 'a' and 'b' are integers. A leading plus or minus sign specifies the sign of the constant. *Floating-point constants*:: A floating-point constant is a sequence of digits containing a decimal point. Digits before or after the decimal point (but not both) are optional. Floating-point constants may also be specified in scientific notation by appending the letter "E" and a positive or negative integer exponent. A leading plus or minus sign specifies the sign of the constant. *Date and time constants*:: A date constant may be specified as 'YYYY-MM-DD' and time constants may be specified as 'HH:MM:SS.nnnnnnnnn' where seconds and nanoseconds are optional. *Interval constants*:: An interval may be specified by one or multiple quantity and unit pairs. The quantity may be any integer constant and the unit may be any of the following: *Y* (years), *M* (months), *D* (days), *h* (hours), *m* (minutes), *s* (seconds), *ms* (milliseconds), *us* (microseconds), or *ns* (nanoseconds). Note that years and months are approximations. RESPONSE FORMAT --------------- The JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) format, as specified in RFC 4627, is used in all replies from the server. http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc4627.txt EXAMPLES -------- The following examples illustrate the use of the commands and what their replies look like. The replies are pretty-printed to more easily follow them. LIST hosts; {"hosts":[{ "name": "host1.example.com", "last_update": "2001-02-03 04:05:06 +0700", "update_interval": "5m4s" },{ "name": "host2.example.com", "last_update": "2001-02-03 04:05:06 +0700", "update_interval": "5m4s" }]} FETCH host 'host1.example.com'; { "name": "host1.example.com", "last_update": "2001-02-03 04:05:06 +0700", "update_interval": "5m4s", "attributes": [{ "name": "architecture", "value": "amd64", "last_update": "2001-02-03 04:05:06 +0700", "update_interval": "5m4s" },{ ... }], "services": [{ "name": "some service", "last_update": "2001-02-03 04:05:06 +0700", "update_interval": "5m4s" },{ ... }]} LOOKUP hosts MATCHING attribute.architecture = 'amd64'; [{ "name": "host1.example.com", "last_update": "2001-02-03 04:05:06 +0700", "update_interval": "5m4s", "attributes": [{ "name": "architecture", "value": "amd64", "last_update": "2001-02-03 04:05:06 +0700", "update_interval": "5m4s" },{ ... }], "services": [{ "name": "some service", "last_update": "2001-02-03 04:05:06 +0700", "update_interval": "5m4s" },{ ... }]},{ ... }] SEE ALSO -------- manpage:sysdb[1], manpage:sysdb[7] The SysDB homepage: http://sysdb.io/ AUTHOR ------ SysDB was written by Sebastian "tokkee" Harl . COPYRIGHT --------- Copyright (C) 2012-2014 Sebastian "tokkee" Harl This is free software under the terms of the BSD license, see the source for copying conditions. There is NO WARRANTY; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. // vim: set tw=78 sw=4 ts=4 noexpandtab spell spelllang=en_us :