* chore: update to go 1.19.6
* chore: gofmt
* test: fix tests for sort order change
* chore: generate pb
* feat: upgrade flux to v0.188.0 (#23911)
* feat: upgrade flux to 0.171.0
Tests failing, safety commit
First step in https://github.com/influxdata/influxdb/issues/23815
* fix: remove "org" parameter" from writeOptSource
I attempted to implement the "orgOpt" argument in a similar fashion
to f6669f7512. However, it looks like Flux doesn't accept "org" as
a parameter to "load". It responds with:
Error calling function \"load\" @113:16-113:30: error calling function \"to\" @6:19-6:47: unused arguments [org]
This brings us from 194 passing to 570 passing.
* fix: temporarily disable broken flux tests
These tests expect rows to be stored in a certain order. However,
nothing is specifying the sort order. This has been fixed in a
later update to flux: (see 3d6f47ded).
Temporarily disable these tests until we include a fixed
version of the flux tests.
* chore: add tests from a492993012
This fixes "test-flux.sh" so it runs tests within the "flux/"
directory. This uncovered some other issues with the tests
located within "flux/". These also needed to be updated
to match the newer flux API.
* feat: upgrade flux to 0.172.0
This includes changes made in "cbbf4b27da". Since "test.go" in 2.x
diverged from 1.x, some modifications were required to make this
compatible.
* feat: upgrade flux to 0.173.0
* feat: upgrade flux to v0.174.0
* fix: Update the condition when reseting cursor (#23522)
Filters that contain `or` may change between cursor resets so we must remember to update the condition in the read cursor.
```flux
|> filter(fn: (r) => ((r["_field"] == "field1" and r["_value"]==true) or (r["_field"] == "field2" and r["_value"] == false)))
```
Closes https://github.com/influxdata/flux/issues/4804
* feat: upgrade flux to 0.174.1
* feat: upgrade flux to 0.175.0
* chore: remove end-to-end tests
These were removed in a492993 for 2.x. These tests prevent "go test ./..."
from completing. As stated in the original commit, these tests should now be
handled by the "fluxtest" harness.
* feat: upgrade flux to 0.176.0
Some tests needed to be disabled within the flux harness. This is a
result of enabling "Optimize Aggregate Window" in flux@05a1065f.
These tests are not present in 2.x. Therefore, I am unsure if
the breakage is resolved in a later commit.
* feat: upgrade flux to 0.177.0
* feat: upgrade flux to 0.178.0
* feat: upgrade flux to v0.179.0
This removes all invocations of "flux.RegisterOpSpec". According
to flux@e39096d5, "flux.RegisterOpSpec" does nothing in the
current version of flux and was removed.
* chore: update fluxtest skip list (#23633)
* chore: manually backport 785a465e9a
This removes the reference to "flux.Spec".
* build(flux): update flux to v0.181.0 (#23682)
* build(flux): update flux to v0.184.2
* chore: skip more Flux acceptance tests
There are issues for each skip detailed in test-flux.sh.
* feat: upgrade flux to v0.185.0
This adds "FluxTesting" to the "HTTPD" configuration. This option is
hidden and disabled by default. When "FluxTesting" is set, it
enables the default testing flags for "Flux".
These flags allow the "vectorized float tests" and tests requiring
the "removeRedundantSortNodes" and "labelPolymorphism" flag
enabled to work. These changes are based off of d8553c002e.
flux@3d6f47ded is included within this version of Flux. Therefore
we can now include the "group_*" tests.
* feat: upgrade flux to 0.186.0
* feat: upgrade flux to 0.187.0
* feat: upgrade flux to 0.188.0
* fix: re-run ./generate.sh with updated protoc
* fix: restrict cores to match CircleCI documentation
Co-authored-by: davidby-influx <dbyrne@influxdata.com>
Co-authored-by: Markus Westerlind <marwes91@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Sean Brickley <sean@wabr.io>
Co-authored-by: Jonathan A. Sternberg <jonathan@influxdata.com>
Co-authored-by: Christopher M. Wolff <chris.wolff@influxdata.com>
---------
Co-authored-by: Brandon Pfeifer <bpfeifer@influxdata.com>
Co-authored-by: davidby-influx <dbyrne@influxdata.com>
Co-authored-by: Markus Westerlind <marwes91@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Sean Brickley <sean@wabr.io>
Co-authored-by: Jonathan A. Sternberg <jonathan@influxdata.com>
Co-authored-by: Christopher M. Wolff <chris.wolff@influxdata.com>
* feat(query): hyper log log counting in query engine
In addition to helping with normal queries, this can improve the 'SHOW CARDINALITY'
meta-queries:
time influx -database mydb -execute 'select count_hll(sum_hll(_seriesKey)) from big'
name: big
time count_hll
---- ---------
0 200767781
influx -database mydb -execute 0.06s user 0.12s system 0% cpu 8:49.99 total
These functions, when used on non-float types in subqueries, would
return incorrect results as the type system thought they would return a
different type than the actual implementation would return.
When `top()` or `bottom()` were used and selected auxiliary values, they
would return the wrong values that would be equal to the last point
selected. This is because the aggregators saved the memory address of
the auxiliary fields instead of copying them over. Since the same
auxiliary fields memory location is used for every value returned by the
storage engine, this resulted in the values being incorrect because they
were overwritten with incorrect values.
This fixes that so the auxiliary fields are copied out when they are
saved rather than only the memory location.
This adds numerous technical analysis algorithms:
* exponential_moving_average
* double_exponential_moving_average
* triple_exponential_moving_average
* relative_strength_index
* triple_exponential_average
* kaufmans_efficiency_ratio (commonly referred to as just "Efficiency Ratio")
* kaufmans_adaptive_moving_average
* chande_momentum_oscillator (both the common 'smoothed' version, and the ta-lib version)
This change makes it so that we simplify the math engine so it doesn't
use a complicated set of nested iterators. That way, we have to change
math in one fewer place.
It also greatly simplifies the query engine as now we can create the
necessary iterators, join them by time, name, and tags, and then use the
cursor interface to read them and use eval to compute the result. It
makes it so the auxiliary iterators and all of their complexity can be
removed.
This also makes use of the new eval functionality that was recently
added to the influxql package.
No math functions have been added, but the scaffolding has been included
so things like trigonometry functions are just a single commit away.
This also introduces a small breaking change. Because of the call
optimization, it is now possible to use the same selector multiple times
as a selector. So if you do this:
SELECT max(value) * 2, max(value) / 2 FROM cpu
This will now return the timestamp of the max value rather than zero
since this query is considered to have only a single selector rather
than multiple separate selectors. If any aspect of the selector is
different, such as different selector functions or different arguments,
it will consider the selectors to be aggregates like the old behavior.
This change provides a clear separation between the query engine
mechanics and the query language so that the language can be parsed and
dealt with separate from the query engine itself.