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Important: This documentation is about an older version. It's relevant only to the release noted, many of the features and functions have been updated or replaced. Please view the current version.

Grafana Cloud Enterprise Open source

Time series dimensions

In Introduction to time series, the concept of labels, also called tags, is introduced:

Another feature of a TSDB is the ability to filter measurements using tags. Each data point is labeled with a tag that adds context information, such as where the measurement was taken.

With time series data, the data often contain more than a single series, and is a set of multiple time series. Many Grafana data sources support this type of data.

Temperature by location

The common case is issuing a single query for a measurement with one or more additional properties as dimensions. For example, querying a temperature measurement along with a location property. In this case, multiple series are returned back from that single query and each series has unique location as a dimension.

To identify unique series within a set of time series, Grafana stores dimensions in labels.

Labels

Each time series in Grafana optionally has labels. Labels are a set of key/value pairs for identifying dimensions. Example labels could be {location=us} or {country=us,state=ma,city=boston}. Within a set of time series, the combination of its name and labels identifies each series. For example, temperature {country=us,state=ma,city=boston} could identify the series of temperature values for the city of Boston in the US.

Different sources of time series data have dimensions stored natively, or common storage patterns that allow the data to be extracted into dimensions.

Time series databases (TSDBs) usually natively support dimensionality. Prometheus also stores dimensions in labels. In TSDBs such as Graphite or OpenTSDB the term tags is used instead.

In table databases such SQL, these dimensions are generally the GROUP BY parameters of a query.

Multiple dimensions in table format

In SQL or SQL-like databases that return table responses, additional dimensions are usually represented as columns in the query response table.

Single dimension

For example, consider a query like:

sql
SELECT BUCKET(StartTime, 1h), AVG(Temperature) AS Temp, Location FROM T
  GROUP BY BUCKET(StartTime, 1h), Location
  ORDER BY time asc

This query would return a table with three columns with data types time, number, and string respectively:

StartTimeTempLocation
09:0024LGA
09:0020BOS
10:0026LGA
10:0022BOS

The table format is a long formatted time series, also called tall. It has repeated time stamps, and repeated values in Location. In this case, we have two time series in the set that would be identified as Temp {Location=LGA} and Temp {Location=BOS}.

Individual time series from the set are extracted by using the time typed column StartTime as the time index of the time series, the numeric typed column Temp as the series name, and the name and values of the string typed Location column to build the labels, such as Location=LGA.

Multiple dimensions

If the query is updated to select and group by more than just one string column, for example, GROUP BY BUCKET(StartTime, 1h), Location, Sensor, then an additional dimension is added:

StartTimeTempLocationSensor
09:0024LGAA
09:0024.1LGAB
09:0020BOSA
09:0020.2BOSB
10:0026LGAA
10:0026.1LGAB
10:0022BOSA
10:0022.2BOSB

In this case the labels that represent the dimensions will have two keys based on the two string typed columns Location and Sensor. This data results four series: Temp {Location=LGA,Sensor=A}, Temp {Location=LGA,Sensor=B}, Temp {Location=BOS,Sensor=A}, and Temp {Location=BOS,Sensor=B}.

Note

More than one dimension is currently only supported in the Logs queries within the Azure Monitor service as of version 7.1.

Note

Multiple dimensions are not supported in a way that maps to multiple alerts in Grafana, but rather they are treated as multiple conditions to a single alert. For more information, see the documentation on creating alerts with multiple series.

Multiple values

In the case of SQL-like data sources, more than one numeric column can be selected, with or without additional string columns to be used as dimensions. For example, AVG(Temperature) AS AvgTemp, MAX(Temperature) AS MaxTemp. This, if combined with multiple dimensions, can result in a lot of series. Selecting multiple values is currently only designed to be used with visualization.

Additional technical information on tabular time series formats and how dimensions are extracted can be found in the developer documentation on data frames as time series.