The time_bucket
function is similar to the standard PostgreSQL date_bin
function. Unlike date_bin
, it allows for arbitrary time intervals of months or
longer. The return value is the bucket's start time.
Note that daylight savings time boundaries means that the amount of data
aggregated into a bucket after such a cast can be irregular. For example, if the
bucket_width
is 2 hours, the number of UTC hours bucketed by local time on
daylight savings time boundaries can be either three hours or one hour.
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
bucket_width | INTERVAL | A PostgreSQL time interval for how long each bucket is |
ts | DATE, TIMESTAMP, or TIMESTAMPTZ | The timestamp to bucket |
If you use months as an interval for bucket_width
, you cannot combine it with
a non-month component. For example, 1 month
and 3 months
are both valid
bucket widths, but 1 month 1 day
and 3 months 2 weeks
are not.
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
timezone | TEXT | The timezone for calculating bucket start and end times. Can only be used with TIMESTAMPTZ . Defaults to UTC. |
origin | DATE, TIMESTAMP, or TIMESTAMPTZ | Buckets are aligned relative to this timestamp. Defaults to midnight on January 3, 2000, for buckets that don't include a month or year interval, and to midnight on January 1, 2000, for month, year, and century buckets. |
offset | INTERVAL | The time interval to offset all time buckets by. A positive value shifts bucket start and end times later. A negative value shifts bucket start and end times earlier. offset must be surrounded with double quotes when used as a named argument, because it is a reserved key word in PostgreSQL. |
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
bucket_width | INTEGER | The bucket width |
ts | INTEGER | The timestamp to bucket |
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
offset | INTEGER | The amount to offset all buckets by. A positive value shifts bucket start and end times later. A negative value shifts bucket start and end times earlier. offset must be surrounded with double quotes when used as a named argument, because it is a reserved key word in PostgreSQL. |
Simple five minute averaging:
SELECT time_bucket('5 minutes', time) AS five_min, avg(cpu)FROM metricsGROUP BY five_minORDER BY five_min DESC LIMIT 10;
To report the middle of the bucket, instead of the left edge:
SELECT time_bucket('5 minutes', time) + '2.5 minutes'AS five_min, avg(cpu)FROM metricsGROUP BY five_minORDER BY five_min DESC LIMIT 10;
For rounding, move the alignment so that the middle of the bucket is at the five minute mark, and report the middle of the bucket:
SELECT time_bucket('5 minutes', time, '-2.5 minutes'::INTERVAL) + '2.5 minutes'AS five_min, avg(cpu)FROM metricsGROUP BY five_minORDER BY five_min DESC LIMIT 10;
In this example, add the explicit cast to ensure that PostgreSQL chooses the correct function.
To shift the alignment of the buckets you can use the origin parameter passed as a timestamp, timestamptz, or date type. This example shifts the start of the week to a Sunday, instead of the default of Monday:
SELECT time_bucket('1 week', timetz, TIMESTAMPTZ '2017-12-31')AS one_week, avg(cpu)FROM metricsGROUP BY one_weekWHERE time > TIMESTAMPTZ '2017-12-01' AND time < TIMESTAMPTZ '2018-01-03'ORDER BY one_week DESC LIMIT 10;
The value of the origin parameter in this example is 2017-12-31
, a Sunday
within the period being analyzed. However, the origin provided to the function
can be before, during, or after the data being analyzed. All buckets are
calculated relative to this origin. So, in this example, any Sunday could have
been used. Note that because time < TIMESTAMPTZ '2018-01-03'
is used in this
example, the last bucket would have only 4 days of data. This cast to TIMESTAMP
converts the time to local time according to the server's timezone setting.
SELECT time_bucket(INTERVAL '2 hours', timetz::TIMESTAMP)AS five_min, avg(cpu)FROM metricsGROUP BY five_minORDER BY five_min DESC LIMIT 10;
Bucket temperature values to calculate the average monthly temperature. Set the timezone to 'Europe/Berlin' so bucket start and end times are aligned to midnight in Berlin.
SELECT time_bucket('1 month', ts, 'Europe/Berlin') AS month_bucket,avg(temperature) AS avg_tempFROM weatherGROUP BY month_bucketORDER BY month_bucket DESC LIMIT 10;
Keywords
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