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UDF Libraries

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UDF Libraries

Data Quality

Completeness

Usage

This function is used to calculate the completeness of time series. The input series are divided into several continuous and non overlapping windows. The timestamp of the first data point and the completeness of each window will be output.

Name: COMPLETENESS

Input Series: Only support a single input series. The type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

Parameters:

  • window: The size of each window. It is a positive integer or a positive number with an unit. The former is the number of data points in each window. The number of data points in the last window may be less than it. The latter is the time of the window. The unit is 'ms' for millisecond, 's' for second, 'm' for minute, 'h' for hour and 'd' for day. By default, all input data belongs to the same window.
  • downtime: Whether the downtime exception is considered in the calculation of completeness. It is 'true' or 'false' (default). When considering the downtime exception, long-term missing data will be considered as downtime exception without any influence on completeness.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is DOUBLE. The range of each value is [0,1].

Note: Only when the number of data points in the window exceeds 10, the calculation will be performed. Otherwise, the window will be ignored and nothing will be output.

Examples

Default Parameters

With default parameters, this function will regard all input data as the same window.

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d1.s1|
+-----------------------------+---------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|          100.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:03.000+08:00|          101.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:04.000+08:00|          102.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:06.000+08:00|          104.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:08.000+08:00|          126.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:10.000+08:00|          108.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:14.000+08:00|          112.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:15.000+08:00|          113.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:16.000+08:00|          114.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:18.000+08:00|          116.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:20.000+08:00|          118.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:22.000+08:00|          120.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:26.000+08:00|          124.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:28.000+08:00|          126.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:30.000+08:00|            NaN|
+-----------------------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select completeness(s1) from root.test.d1 where time <= 2020-01-01 00:00:30

Output series:

+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
|                         Time|completeness(root.test.d1.s1)|
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|                        0.875|
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
Specific Window Size

When the window size is given, this function will divide the input data as multiple windows.

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d1.s1|
+-----------------------------+---------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|          100.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:03.000+08:00|          101.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:04.000+08:00|          102.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:06.000+08:00|          104.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:08.000+08:00|          126.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:10.000+08:00|          108.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:14.000+08:00|          112.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:15.000+08:00|          113.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:16.000+08:00|          114.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:18.000+08:00|          116.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:20.000+08:00|          118.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:22.000+08:00|          120.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:26.000+08:00|          124.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:28.000+08:00|          126.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:30.000+08:00|            NaN|
|2020-01-01T00:00:32.000+08:00|          130.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:34.000+08:00|          132.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:36.000+08:00|          134.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:38.000+08:00|          136.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:40.000+08:00|          138.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:42.000+08:00|          140.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:44.000+08:00|          142.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:46.000+08:00|          144.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:48.000+08:00|          146.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:50.000+08:00|          148.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:52.000+08:00|          150.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:54.000+08:00|          152.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:56.000+08:00|          154.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:58.000+08:00|          156.0|
|2020-01-01T00:01:00.000+08:00|          158.0|
+-----------------------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select completeness(s1,"window"="15") from root.test.d1 where time <= 2020-01-01 00:01:00

Output series:

+-----------------------------+--------------------------------------------+
|                         Time|completeness(root.test.d1.s1, "window"="15")|
+-----------------------------+--------------------------------------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|                                       0.875|
|2020-01-01T00:00:32.000+08:00|                                         1.0|
+-----------------------------+--------------------------------------------+

Consistency

Usage

This function is used to calculate the consistency of time series. The input series are divided into several continuous and non overlapping windows. The timestamp of the first data point and the consistency of each window will be output.

Name: CONSISTENCY

Input Series: Only support a single input series. The type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

Parameters:

  • window: The size of each window. It is a positive integer or a positive number with an unit. The former is the number of data points in each window. The number of data points in the last window may be less than it. The latter is the time of the window. The unit is 'ms' for millisecond, 's' for second, 'm' for minute, 'h' for hour and 'd' for day. By default, all input data belongs to the same window.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is DOUBLE. The range of each value is [0,1].

Note: Only when the number of data points in the window exceeds 10, the calculation will be performed. Otherwise, the window will be ignored and nothing will be output.

Examples

Default Parameters

With default parameters, this function will regard all input data as the same window.

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d1.s1|
+-----------------------------+---------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|          100.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:03.000+08:00|          101.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:04.000+08:00|          102.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:06.000+08:00|          104.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:08.000+08:00|          126.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:10.000+08:00|          108.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:14.000+08:00|          112.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:15.000+08:00|          113.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:16.000+08:00|          114.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:18.000+08:00|          116.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:20.000+08:00|          118.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:22.000+08:00|          120.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:26.000+08:00|          124.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:28.000+08:00|          126.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:30.000+08:00|            NaN|
+-----------------------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select consistency(s1) from root.test.d1 where time <= 2020-01-01 00:00:30

Output series:

+-----------------------------+----------------------------+
|                         Time|consistency(root.test.d1.s1)|
+-----------------------------+----------------------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|          0.9333333333333333|
+-----------------------------+----------------------------+
Specific Window Size

When the window size is given, this function will divide the input data as multiple windows.

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d1.s1|
+-----------------------------+---------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|          100.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:03.000+08:00|          101.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:04.000+08:00|          102.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:06.000+08:00|          104.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:08.000+08:00|          126.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:10.000+08:00|          108.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:14.000+08:00|          112.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:15.000+08:00|          113.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:16.000+08:00|          114.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:18.000+08:00|          116.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:20.000+08:00|          118.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:22.000+08:00|          120.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:26.000+08:00|          124.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:28.000+08:00|          126.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:30.000+08:00|            NaN|
|2020-01-01T00:00:32.000+08:00|          130.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:34.000+08:00|          132.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:36.000+08:00|          134.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:38.000+08:00|          136.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:40.000+08:00|          138.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:42.000+08:00|          140.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:44.000+08:00|          142.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:46.000+08:00|          144.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:48.000+08:00|          146.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:50.000+08:00|          148.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:52.000+08:00|          150.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:54.000+08:00|          152.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:56.000+08:00|          154.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:58.000+08:00|          156.0|
|2020-01-01T00:01:00.000+08:00|          158.0|
+-----------------------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select consistency(s1,"window"="15") from root.test.d1 where time <= 2020-01-01 00:01:00

Output series:

+-----------------------------+-------------------------------------------+
|                         Time|consistency(root.test.d1.s1, "window"="15")|
+-----------------------------+-------------------------------------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|                         0.9333333333333333|
|2020-01-01T00:00:32.000+08:00|                                        1.0|
+-----------------------------+-------------------------------------------+

Timeliness

Usage

This function is used to calculate the timeliness of time series. The input series are divided into several continuous and non overlapping windows. The timestamp of the first data point and the timeliness of each window will be output.

Name: TIMELINESS

Input Series: Only support a single input series. The type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

Parameters:

  • window: The size of each window. It is a positive integer or a positive number with an unit. The former is the number of data points in each window. The number of data points in the last window may be less than it. The latter is the time of the window. The unit is 'ms' for millisecond, 's' for second, 'm' for minute, 'h' for hour and 'd' for day. By default, all input data belongs to the same window.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is DOUBLE. The range of each value is [0,1].

Note: Only when the number of data points in the window exceeds 10, the calculation will be performed. Otherwise, the window will be ignored and nothing will be output.

Examples

Default Parameters

With default parameters, this function will regard all input data as the same window.

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d1.s1|
+-----------------------------+---------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|          100.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:03.000+08:00|          101.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:04.000+08:00|          102.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:06.000+08:00|          104.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:08.000+08:00|          126.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:10.000+08:00|          108.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:14.000+08:00|          112.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:15.000+08:00|          113.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:16.000+08:00|          114.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:18.000+08:00|          116.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:20.000+08:00|          118.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:22.000+08:00|          120.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:26.000+08:00|          124.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:28.000+08:00|          126.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:30.000+08:00|            NaN|
+-----------------------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select timeliness(s1) from root.test.d1 where time <= 2020-01-01 00:00:30

Output series:

+-----------------------------+---------------------------+
|                         Time|timeliness(root.test.d1.s1)|
+-----------------------------+---------------------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|         0.9333333333333333|
+-----------------------------+---------------------------+
Specific Window Size

When the window size is given, this function will divide the input data as multiple windows.

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d1.s1|
+-----------------------------+---------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|          100.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:03.000+08:00|          101.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:04.000+08:00|          102.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:06.000+08:00|          104.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:08.000+08:00|          126.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:10.000+08:00|          108.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:14.000+08:00|          112.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:15.000+08:00|          113.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:16.000+08:00|          114.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:18.000+08:00|          116.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:20.000+08:00|          118.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:22.000+08:00|          120.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:26.000+08:00|          124.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:28.000+08:00|          126.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:30.000+08:00|            NaN|
|2020-01-01T00:00:32.000+08:00|          130.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:34.000+08:00|          132.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:36.000+08:00|          134.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:38.000+08:00|          136.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:40.000+08:00|          138.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:42.000+08:00|          140.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:44.000+08:00|          142.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:46.000+08:00|          144.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:48.000+08:00|          146.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:50.000+08:00|          148.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:52.000+08:00|          150.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:54.000+08:00|          152.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:56.000+08:00|          154.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:58.000+08:00|          156.0|
|2020-01-01T00:01:00.000+08:00|          158.0|
+-----------------------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select timeliness(s1,"window"="15") from root.test.d1 where time <= 2020-01-01 00:01:00

Output series:

+-----------------------------+------------------------------------------+
|                         Time|timeliness(root.test.d1.s1, "window"="15")|
+-----------------------------+------------------------------------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|                        0.9333333333333333|
|2020-01-01T00:00:32.000+08:00|                                       1.0|
+-----------------------------+------------------------------------------+

Validity

Usage

This function is used to calculate the Validity of time series. The input series are divided into several continuous and non overlapping windows. The timestamp of the first data point and the Validity of each window will be output.

Name: VALIDITY

Input Series: Only support a single input series. The type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

Parameters:

  • window: The size of each window. It is a positive integer or a positive number with an unit. The former is the number of data points in each window. The number of data points in the last window may be less than it. The latter is the time of the window. The unit is 'ms' for millisecond, 's' for second, 'm' for minute, 'h' for hour and 'd' for day. By default, all input data belongs to the same window.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is DOUBLE. The range of each value is [0,1].

Note: Only when the number of data points in the window exceeds 10, the calculation will be performed. Otherwise, the window will be ignored and nothing will be output.

Examples

Default Parameters

With default parameters, this function will regard all input data as the same window.

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d1.s1|
+-----------------------------+---------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|          100.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:03.000+08:00|          101.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:04.000+08:00|          102.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:06.000+08:00|          104.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:08.000+08:00|          126.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:10.000+08:00|          108.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:14.000+08:00|          112.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:15.000+08:00|          113.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:16.000+08:00|          114.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:18.000+08:00|          116.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:20.000+08:00|          118.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:22.000+08:00|          120.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:26.000+08:00|          124.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:28.000+08:00|          126.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:30.000+08:00|            NaN|
+-----------------------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select Validity(s1) from root.test.d1 where time <= 2020-01-01 00:00:30

Output series:

+-----------------------------+-------------------------+
|                         Time|validity(root.test.d1.s1)|
+-----------------------------+-------------------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|       0.8833333333333333|
+-----------------------------+-------------------------+
Specific Window Size

When the window size is given, this function will divide the input data as multiple windows.

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d1.s1|
+-----------------------------+---------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|          100.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:03.000+08:00|          101.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:04.000+08:00|          102.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:06.000+08:00|          104.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:08.000+08:00|          126.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:10.000+08:00|          108.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:14.000+08:00|          112.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:15.000+08:00|          113.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:16.000+08:00|          114.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:18.000+08:00|          116.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:20.000+08:00|          118.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:22.000+08:00|          120.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:26.000+08:00|          124.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:28.000+08:00|          126.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:30.000+08:00|            NaN|
|2020-01-01T00:00:32.000+08:00|          130.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:34.000+08:00|          132.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:36.000+08:00|          134.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:38.000+08:00|          136.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:40.000+08:00|          138.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:42.000+08:00|          140.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:44.000+08:00|          142.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:46.000+08:00|          144.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:48.000+08:00|          146.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:50.000+08:00|          148.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:52.000+08:00|          150.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:54.000+08:00|          152.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:56.000+08:00|          154.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:58.000+08:00|          156.0|
|2020-01-01T00:01:00.000+08:00|          158.0|
+-----------------------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select Validity(s1,"window"="15") from root.test.d1 where time <= 2020-01-01 00:01:00

Output series:

+-----------------------------+----------------------------------------+
|                         Time|validity(root.test.d1.s1, "window"="15")|
+-----------------------------+----------------------------------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|                      0.8833333333333333|
|2020-01-01T00:00:32.000+08:00|                                     1.0|
+-----------------------------+----------------------------------------+

Accuracy

Usage

This function is used to calculate the Accuracy of time series based on master data.

Name: Accuracy

Input Series: Support multiple input series. The types are are in INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

Parameters:

  • omega: The window size. It is a non-negative integer whose unit is millisecond. By default, it will be estimated according to the distances of two tuples with various time differences.
  • eta: The distance threshold. It is a positive number. By default, it will be estimated according to the distance distribution of tuples in windows.
  • k: The number of neighbors in master data. It is a positive integer. By default, it will be estimated according to the tuple dis- tance of the k-th nearest neighbor in the master data.

Output Series: Output a single value. The type is DOUBLE. The range is [0,1].

Examples

Input series:

+-----------------------------+------------+------------+------------+------------+------------+------------+
|                         Time|root.test.t1|root.test.t2|root.test.t3|root.test.m1|root.test.m2|root.test.m3|
+-----------------------------+------------+------------+------------+------------+------------+------------+
|2021-07-01T12:00:01.000+08:00|        1704|     1154.55|       0.195|        1704|     1154.55|       0.195|
|2021-07-01T12:00:02.000+08:00|        1702|     1152.30|       0.193|        1702|     1152.30|       0.193|
|2021-07-01T12:00:03.000+08:00|        1702|     1148.65|       0.192|        1702|     1148.65|       0.192|
|2021-07-01T12:00:04.000+08:00|        1701|     1145.20|       0.194|        1701|     1145.20|       0.194|
|2021-07-01T12:00:07.000+08:00|        1703|     1150.55|       0.195|        1703|     1150.55|       0.195|
|2021-07-01T12:00:08.000+08:00|        1694|     1151.55|       0.193|        1704|     1151.55|       0.193|
|2021-07-01T12:01:09.000+08:00|        1705|     1153.55|       0.194|        1705|     1153.55|       0.194|
|2021-07-01T12:01:10.000+08:00|        1706|     1152.30|       0.190|        1706|     1152.30|       0.190|
+-----------------------------+------------+------------+------------+------------+------------+------------+

SQL for query:

select Accuracy(t1,t2,t3,m1,m2,m3) from root.test

Output series:

+-----------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|                         Time|Accuracy(root.test.t1,root.test.t2,root.test.t3,root.test.m1,root.test.m2,root.test.m3)|
+-----------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|2021-07-01T12:00:01.000+08:00|                                                                                  0.875|
+-----------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+

Data Profiling

ACF

Usage

This function is used to calculate the auto-correlation factor of the input time series,
which equals to cross correlation between the same series.
For more information, please refer to XCorr function.

Name: ACF

Input Series: Only support a single input numeric series. The type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is DOUBLE.
There are $2N-1$ data points in the series, and the values are interpreted in details in XCorr function.

Note:

  • null and NaN values in the input series will be ignored and treated as 0.

Examples

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d1.s1|
+-----------------------------+---------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:01.000+08:00|              1|
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|           null|
|2020-01-01T00:00:03.000+08:00|              3|
|2020-01-01T00:00:04.000+08:00|            NaN|
|2020-01-01T00:00:05.000+08:00|              5|
+-----------------------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select acf(s1) from root.test.d1 where time <= 2020-01-01 00:00:05

Output series:

+-----------------------------+--------------------+
|                         Time|acf(root.test.d1.s1)|
+-----------------------------+--------------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.001+08:00|                 1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.002+08:00|                 0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.003+08:00|                 3.6|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.004+08:00|                 0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.005+08:00|                 7.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.006+08:00|                 0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.007+08:00|                 3.6|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.008+08:00|                 0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.009+08:00|                 1.0|
+-----------------------------+--------------------+

Distinct

Usage

This function returns all unique values in time series.

Name: DISTINCT

Input Series: Only support a single input series. The type is arbitrary.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is the same as the input.

Note:

  • The timestamp of the output series is meaningless. The output order is arbitrary.
  • Missing points and null points in the input series will be ignored, but NaN will not.
  • Case Sensitive.

Examples

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d2.s2|
+-----------------------------+---------------+
|2020-01-01T08:00:00.001+08:00|          Hello|
|2020-01-01T08:00:00.002+08:00|          hello|
|2020-01-01T08:00:00.003+08:00|          Hello|
|2020-01-01T08:00:00.004+08:00|          World|
|2020-01-01T08:00:00.005+08:00|          World|
+-----------------------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select distinct(s2) from root.test.d2

Output series:

+-----------------------------+-------------------------+
|                         Time|distinct(root.test.d2.s2)|
+-----------------------------+-------------------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.001+08:00|                    Hello|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.002+08:00|                    hello|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.003+08:00|                    World|
+-----------------------------+-------------------------+

Histogram

Usage

This function is used to calculate the distribution histogram of a single column of numerical data.

Name: HISTOGRAM

Input Series: Only supports a single input sequence, the type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE

Parameters:

  • min: The lower limit of the requested data range, the default value is -Double.MAX_VALUE.
  • max: The upper limit of the requested data range, the default value is Double.MAX_VALUE, and the value of start must be less than or equal to end.
  • count: The number of buckets of the histogram, the default value is 1. It must be a positive integer.

Output Series: The value of the bucket of the histogram, where the lower bound represented by the i-th bucket (index starts from 1) is $min+ (i-1)\cdot\frac{max-min}{count}$ and the upper bound is $min + i \cdot \frac{max-min}{count}$.

Note:

  • If the value is lower than min, it will be put into the 1st bucket. If the value is larger than max, it will be put into the last bucket.
  • Missing points, null points and NaN in the input series will be ignored.

Examples

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d1.s1|
+-----------------------------+---------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:00.000+08:00|            1.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:01.000+08:00|            2.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|            3.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:03.000+08:00|            4.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:04.000+08:00|            5.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:05.000+08:00|            6.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:06.000+08:00|            7.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:07.000+08:00|            8.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:08.000+08:00|            9.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:09.000+08:00|           10.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:10.000+08:00|           11.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:11.000+08:00|           12.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:12.000+08:00|           13.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:13.000+08:00|           14.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:14.000+08:00|           15.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:15.000+08:00|           16.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:16.000+08:00|           17.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:17.000+08:00|           18.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:18.000+08:00|           19.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:19.000+08:00|           20.0|
+-----------------------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select histogram(s1,"min"="1","max"="20","count"="10") from root.test.d1

Output series:

+-----------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------+
|                         Time|histogram(root.test.d1.s1, "min"="1", "max"="20", "count"="10")|
+-----------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.000+08:00|                                                              2|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.001+08:00|                                                              2|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.002+08:00|                                                              2|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.003+08:00|                                                              2|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.004+08:00|                                                              2|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.005+08:00|                                                              2|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.006+08:00|                                                              2|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.007+08:00|                                                              2|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.008+08:00|                                                              2|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.009+08:00|                                                              2|
+-----------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------+

Integral

Usage

This function is used to calculate the integration of time series,
which equals to the area under the curve with time as X-axis and values as Y-axis.

Name: INTEGRAL

Input Series: Only support a single input numeric series. The type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

Parameters:

  • unit: The unit of time used when computing the integral.
    The value should be chosen from "1S", "1s", "1m", "1H", "1d"(case-sensitive),
    and each represents taking one millisecond / second / minute / hour / day as 1.0 while calculating the area and integral.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is DOUBLE. There is only one data point in the series, whose timestamp is 0 and value is the integration.

Note:

  • The integral value equals to the sum of the areas of right-angled trapezoids consisting of each two adjacent points and the time-axis.
    Choosing different unit implies different scaling of time axis, thus making it apparent to convert the value among those results with constant coefficient.

  • NaN values in the input series will be ignored. The curve or trapezoids will skip these points and use the next valid point.

Examples

Default Parameters

With default parameters, this function will take one second as 1.0.

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d1.s1|
+-----------------------------+---------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:01.000+08:00|              1|
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|              2|
|2020-01-01T00:00:03.000+08:00|              5|
|2020-01-01T00:00:04.000+08:00|              6|
|2020-01-01T00:00:05.000+08:00|              7|
|2020-01-01T00:00:08.000+08:00|              8|
|2020-01-01T00:00:09.000+08:00|            NaN|
|2020-01-01T00:00:10.000+08:00|             10|
+-----------------------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select integral(s1) from root.test.d1 where time <= 2020-01-01 00:00:10

Output series:

+-----------------------------+-------------------------+
|                         Time|integral(root.test.d1.s1)|
+-----------------------------+-------------------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.000+08:00|                     57.5|
+-----------------------------+-------------------------+

Calculation expression:
$$\frac{1}{2}[(1+2) \times 1 + (2+5) \times 1 + (5+6) \times 1 + (6+7) \times 1 + (7+8) \times 3 + (8+10) \times 2] = 57.5$$

Specific time unit

With time unit specified as "1m", this function will take one minute as 1.0.

Input series is the same as above, the SQL for query is shown below:

select integral(s1, "unit"="1m") from root.test.d1 where time <= 2020-01-01 00:00:10

Output series:

+-----------------------------+-------------------------+
|                         Time|integral(root.test.d1.s1)|
+-----------------------------+-------------------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.000+08:00|                    0.958|
+-----------------------------+-------------------------+

Calculation expression:
$$\frac{1}{2\times 60}[(1+2) \times 1 + (2+5) \times 1 + (5+6) \times 1 + (6+7) \times 1 + (7+8) \times 3 + (8+10) \times 2] = 0.958$$

IntegralAvg

Usage

This function is used to calculate the function average of time series.
The output equals to the area divided by the time interval using the same time unit.
For more information of the area under the curve, please refer to Integral function.

Name: INTEGRALAVG

Input Series: Only support a single input numeric series. The type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is DOUBLE. There is only one data point in the series, whose timestamp is 0 and value is the time-weighted average.

Note:

  • The time-weighted value equals to the integral value with any unit divided by the time interval of input series.
    The result is irrelevant to the time unit used in integral, and it's consistent with the timestamp precision of IoTDB by default.

  • NaN values in the input series will be ignored. The curve or trapezoids will skip these points and use the next valid point.

  • If the input series is empty, the output value will be 0.0, but if there is only one data point, the value will equal to the input value.

Examples

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d1.s1|
+-----------------------------+---------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:01.000+08:00|              1|
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|              2|
|2020-01-01T00:00:03.000+08:00|              5|
|2020-01-01T00:00:04.000+08:00|              6|
|2020-01-01T00:00:05.000+08:00|              7|
|2020-01-01T00:00:08.000+08:00|              8|
|2020-01-01T00:00:09.000+08:00|            NaN|
|2020-01-01T00:00:10.000+08:00|             10|
+-----------------------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select integralavg(s1) from root.test.d1 where time <= 2020-01-01 00:00:10

Output series:

+-----------------------------+----------------------------+
|                         Time|integralavg(root.test.d1.s1)|
+-----------------------------+----------------------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.000+08:00|                        5.75|
+-----------------------------+----------------------------+

Calculation expression:
$$\frac{1}{2}[(1+2) \times 1 + (2+5) \times 1 + (5+6) \times 1 + (6+7) \times 1 + (7+8) \times 3 + (8+10) \times 2] / 10 = 5.75$$

Mad

Usage

The function is used to compute the exact or approximate median absolute deviation (MAD) of a numeric time series. MAD is the median of the deviation of each element from the elements' median.

Take a dataset ${1,3,3,5,5,6,7,8,9}$ as an instance. Its median is 5 and the deviation of each element from the median is ${0,0,1,2,2,2,3,4,4}$, whose median is 2. Therefore, the MAD of the original dataset is 2.

Name: MAD

Input Series: Only support a single input series. The data type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

Parameter:

  • error: The relative error of the approximate MAD. It should be within [0,1) and the default value is 0. Taking error=0.01 as an instance, suppose the exact MAD is $a$ and the approximate MAD is $b$, we have $0.99a \le b \le 1.01a$. With error=0, the output is the exact MAD.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is DOUBLE. There is only one data point in the series, whose timestamp is 0 and value is the MAD.

Note: Missing points, null points and NaN in the input series will be ignored.

Examples

Exact Query

With the default error(error=0), the function queries the exact MAD.

Input series:

+-----------------------------+------------+
|                         Time|root.test.s0|
+-----------------------------+------------+
|2021-03-17T10:32:17.054+08:00|   0.5319929|
|2021-03-17T10:32:18.054+08:00|   0.9304316|
|2021-03-17T10:32:19.054+08:00|  -1.4800133|
|2021-03-17T10:32:20.054+08:00|   0.6114087|
|2021-03-17T10:32:21.054+08:00|   2.5163336|
|2021-03-17T10:32:22.054+08:00|  -1.0845392|
|2021-03-17T10:32:23.054+08:00|   1.0562582|
|2021-03-17T10:32:24.054+08:00|   1.3867859|
|2021-03-17T10:32:25.054+08:00| -0.45429882|
|2021-03-17T10:32:26.054+08:00|   1.0353678|
|2021-03-17T10:32:27.054+08:00|   0.7307929|
|2021-03-17T10:32:28.054+08:00|   2.3167255|
|2021-03-17T10:32:29.054+08:00|    2.342443|
|2021-03-17T10:32:30.054+08:00|   1.5809103|
|2021-03-17T10:32:31.054+08:00|   1.4829416|
|2021-03-17T10:32:32.054+08:00|   1.5800357|
|2021-03-17T10:32:33.054+08:00|   0.7124368|
|2021-03-17T10:32:34.054+08:00| -0.78597564|
|2021-03-17T10:32:35.054+08:00|   1.2058644|
|2021-03-17T10:32:36.054+08:00|   1.4215064|
|2021-03-17T10:32:37.054+08:00|   1.2808295|
|2021-03-17T10:32:38.054+08:00|  -0.6173715|
|2021-03-17T10:32:39.054+08:00|  0.06644377|
|2021-03-17T10:32:40.054+08:00|    2.349338|
|2021-03-17T10:32:41.054+08:00|   1.7335888|
|2021-03-17T10:32:42.054+08:00|   1.5872132|
............
Total line number = 10000

SQL for query:

select mad(s0) from root.test

Output series:

+-----------------------------+------------------+
|                         Time| mad(root.test.s0)|
+-----------------------------+------------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.000+08:00|0.6806197166442871|
+-----------------------------+------------------+
Approximate Query

By setting error within (0,1), the function queries the approximate MAD.

SQL for query:

select mad(s0, "error"="0.01") from root.test

Output series:

+-----------------------------+---------------------------------+
|                         Time|mad(root.test.s0, "error"="0.01")|
+-----------------------------+---------------------------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.000+08:00|               0.6806616245859518|
+-----------------------------+---------------------------------+

Median

Usage

The function is used to compute the exact or approximate median of a numeric time series. Median is the value separating the higher half from the lower half of a data sample.

Name: MEDIAN

Input Series: Only support a single input series. The data type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

Parameter:

  • error: The rank error of the approximate median. It should be within [0,1) and the default value is 0. For instance, a median with error=0.01 is the value of the element with rank percentage 0.49~0.51. With error=0, the output is the exact median.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is DOUBLE. There is only one data point in the series, whose timestamp is 0 and value is the median.

Examples

Input series:

+-----------------------------+------------+
|                         Time|root.test.s0|
+-----------------------------+------------+
|2021-03-17T10:32:17.054+08:00|   0.5319929|
|2021-03-17T10:32:18.054+08:00|   0.9304316|
|2021-03-17T10:32:19.054+08:00|  -1.4800133|
|2021-03-17T10:32:20.054+08:00|   0.6114087|
|2021-03-17T10:32:21.054+08:00|   2.5163336|
|2021-03-17T10:32:22.054+08:00|  -1.0845392|
|2021-03-17T10:32:23.054+08:00|   1.0562582|
|2021-03-17T10:32:24.054+08:00|   1.3867859|
|2021-03-17T10:32:25.054+08:00| -0.45429882|
|2021-03-17T10:32:26.054+08:00|   1.0353678|
|2021-03-17T10:32:27.054+08:00|   0.7307929|
|2021-03-17T10:32:28.054+08:00|   2.3167255|
|2021-03-17T10:32:29.054+08:00|    2.342443|
|2021-03-17T10:32:30.054+08:00|   1.5809103|
|2021-03-17T10:32:31.054+08:00|   1.4829416|
|2021-03-17T10:32:32.054+08:00|   1.5800357|
|2021-03-17T10:32:33.054+08:00|   0.7124368|
|2021-03-17T10:32:34.054+08:00| -0.78597564|
|2021-03-17T10:32:35.054+08:00|   1.2058644|
|2021-03-17T10:32:36.054+08:00|   1.4215064|
|2021-03-17T10:32:37.054+08:00|   1.2808295|
|2021-03-17T10:32:38.054+08:00|  -0.6173715|
|2021-03-17T10:32:39.054+08:00|  0.06644377|
|2021-03-17T10:32:40.054+08:00|    2.349338|
|2021-03-17T10:32:41.054+08:00|   1.7335888|
|2021-03-17T10:32:42.054+08:00|   1.5872132|
............
Total line number = 10000

SQL for query:

select median(s0, "error"="0.01") from root.test

Output series:

+-----------------------------+------------------------------------+
|                         Time|median(root.test.s0, "error"="0.01")|
+-----------------------------+------------------------------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.000+08:00|                   1.021884560585022|
+-----------------------------+------------------------------------+

MinMax

Usage

This function is used to standardize the input series with min-max. Minimum value is transformed to 0; maximum value is transformed to 1.

Name: MINMAX

Input Series: Only support a single input series. The type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

  • compute: When set to "batch", anomaly test is conducted after importing all data points; when set to "stream", it is required to provide minimum and maximum values. The default method is "batch".
  • min: The maximum value when method is set to "stream".
  • max: The minimum value when method is set to "stream".

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is DOUBLE.

Examples

Batch computing

Input series:

+-----------------------------+------------+
|                         Time|root.test.s1|
+-----------------------------+------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.100+08:00|         0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.200+08:00|         0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.300+08:00|         1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.400+08:00|        -1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.500+08:00|         0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.600+08:00|         0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.700+08:00|        -2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.800+08:00|         2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.900+08:00|         0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.000+08:00|         0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.100+08:00|         1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.200+08:00|        -1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.300+08:00|        -1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.400+08:00|         1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.500+08:00|         0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.600+08:00|         0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.700+08:00|        10.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.800+08:00|         2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.900+08:00|        -2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:02.000+08:00|         0.0|
+-----------------------------+------------+

SQL for query:

select minmax(s1) from root.test

Output series:

+-----------------------------+--------------------+
|                         Time|minmax(root.test.s1)|
+-----------------------------+--------------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.100+08:00| 0.16666666666666666|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.200+08:00| 0.16666666666666666|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.300+08:00|                0.25|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.400+08:00| 0.08333333333333333|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.500+08:00| 0.16666666666666666|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.600+08:00| 0.16666666666666666|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.700+08:00|                 0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.800+08:00|  0.3333333333333333|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.900+08:00| 0.16666666666666666|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.000+08:00| 0.16666666666666666|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.100+08:00|                0.25|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.200+08:00| 0.08333333333333333|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.300+08:00| 0.08333333333333333|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.400+08:00|                0.25|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.500+08:00| 0.16666666666666666|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.600+08:00| 0.16666666666666666|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.700+08:00|                 1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.800+08:00|  0.3333333333333333|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.900+08:00|                 0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:02.000+08:00| 0.16666666666666666|
+-----------------------------+--------------------+

Mode

Usage

This function is used to calculate the mode of time series, that is, the value that occurs most frequently.

Name: MODE

Input Series: Only support a single input series. The type is arbitrary.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is the same as the input. There is only one data point in the series, whose timestamp is the same as which the first mode value has and value is the mode.

Note:

  • If there are multiple values with the most occurrences, the arbitrary one will be output.
  • Missing points and null points in the input series will be ignored, but NaN will not.

Examples

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d2.s2|
+-----------------------------+---------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.001+08:00|          Hello|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.002+08:00|          hello|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.003+08:00|          Hello|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.004+08:00|          World|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.005+08:00|          World|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.600+08:00|          World|
|1970-01-15T09:37:34.451+08:00|          Hello|
|1970-01-15T09:37:34.452+08:00|          hello|
|1970-01-15T09:37:34.453+08:00|          Hello|
|1970-01-15T09:37:34.454+08:00|          World|
|1970-01-15T09:37:34.455+08:00|          World|
+-----------------------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select mode(s2) from root.test.d2

Output series:

+-----------------------------+---------------------+
|                         Time|mode(root.test.d2.s2)|
+-----------------------------+---------------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.004+08:00|                World|
+-----------------------------+---------------------+

MvAvg

Usage

This function is used to calculate moving average of input series.

Name: MVAVG

Input Series: Only support a single input series. The type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

  • window: Length of the moving window. Default value is 10.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is DOUBLE.

Examples

Batch computing

Input series:

+-----------------------------+------------+
|                         Time|root.test.s1|
+-----------------------------+------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.100+08:00|         0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.200+08:00|         0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.300+08:00|         1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.400+08:00|        -1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.500+08:00|         0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.600+08:00|         0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.700+08:00|        -2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.800+08:00|         2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.900+08:00|         0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.000+08:00|         0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.100+08:00|         1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.200+08:00|        -1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.300+08:00|        -1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.400+08:00|         1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.500+08:00|         0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.600+08:00|         0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.700+08:00|        10.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.800+08:00|         2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.900+08:00|        -2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:02.000+08:00|         0.0|
+-----------------------------+------------+

SQL for query:

select mvavg(s1, "window"="3") from root.test

Output series:

+-----------------------------+---------------------------------+
|                         Time|mvavg(root.test.s1, "window"="3")|
+-----------------------------+---------------------------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.300+08:00|               0.3333333333333333|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.400+08:00|                              0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.500+08:00|              -0.3333333333333333|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.600+08:00|                              0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.700+08:00|              -0.6666666666666666|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.800+08:00|                              0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.900+08:00|               0.6666666666666666|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.000+08:00|                              0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.100+08:00|               0.3333333333333333|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.200+08:00|                              0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.300+08:00|              -0.6666666666666666|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.400+08:00|                              0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.500+08:00|               0.3333333333333333|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.600+08:00|                              0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.700+08:00|               3.3333333333333335|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.800+08:00|                              4.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.900+08:00|                              0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:02.000+08:00|              -0.6666666666666666|
+-----------------------------+---------------------------------+

PACF

Usage

This function is used to calculate partial autocorrelation of input series by solving Yule-Walker equation. For some cases, the equation may not be solved, and NaN will be output.

Name: PACF

Input Series: Only support a single input series. The type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

  • lag: Maximum lag of pacf to calculate. The default value is $\min(10\log_{10}n,n-1)$, where $n$ is the number of data points.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is DOUBLE.

Examples

Assigning maximum lag

Input series:

+-----------------------------+------------+
|                         Time|root.test.s1|
+-----------------------------+------------+
|2019-12-27T00:00:00.000+08:00|         5.0|
|2019-12-27T00:05:00.000+08:00|         5.0|
|2019-12-27T00:10:00.000+08:00|         5.0|
|2019-12-27T00:15:00.000+08:00|         5.0|
|2019-12-27T00:20:00.000+08:00|         6.0|
|2019-12-27T00:25:00.000+08:00|         5.0|
|2019-12-27T00:30:00.000+08:00|         6.0|
|2019-12-27T00:35:00.000+08:00|         6.0|
|2019-12-27T00:40:00.000+08:00|         6.0|
|2019-12-27T00:45:00.000+08:00|         6.0|
|2019-12-27T00:50:00.000+08:00|         6.0|
|2019-12-27T00:55:00.000+08:00|    5.982609|
|2019-12-27T01:00:00.000+08:00|   5.9652176|
|2019-12-27T01:05:00.000+08:00|    5.947826|
|2019-12-27T01:10:00.000+08:00|   5.9304347|
|2019-12-27T01:15:00.000+08:00|   5.9130435|
|2019-12-27T01:20:00.000+08:00|   5.8956523|
|2019-12-27T01:25:00.000+08:00|    5.878261|
|2019-12-27T01:30:00.000+08:00|   5.8608694|
|2019-12-27T01:35:00.000+08:00|    5.843478|
............
Total line number = 18066

SQL for query:

select pacf(s1, "lag"="5") from root.test

Output series:

+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
|                         Time|pacf(root.test.s1, "lag"="5")|
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
|2019-12-27T00:00:00.000+08:00|                          1.0|
|2019-12-27T00:05:00.000+08:00|           0.3528915091942786|
|2019-12-27T00:10:00.000+08:00|           0.1761346122516304|
|2019-12-27T00:15:00.000+08:00|           0.1492391973294682|
|2019-12-27T00:20:00.000+08:00|          0.03560059645868398|
|2019-12-27T00:25:00.000+08:00|           0.0366222998995286|
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+

Percentile

Usage

The function is used to compute the exact or approximate percentile of a numeric time series. A percentile is value of element in the certain rank of the sorted series.

Name: PERCENTILE

Input Series: Only support a single input series. The data type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

Parameter:

  • rank: The rank percentage of the percentile. It should be (0,1] and the default value is 0.5. For instance, a percentile with rank=0.5 is the median.
  • error: The rank error of the approximate percentile. It should be within [0,1) and the default value is 0. For instance, a 0.5-percentile with error=0.01 is the value of the element with rank percentage 0.49~0.51. With error=0, the output is the exact percentile.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is the same as input series. If error=0, there is only one data point in the series, whose timestamp is the same has which the first percentile value has, and value is the percentile, otherwise the timestamp of the only data point is 0.

Note: Missing points, null points and NaN in the input series will be ignored.

Examples

Input series:

+-----------------------------+------------+
|                         Time|root.test.s0|
+-----------------------------+------------+
|2021-03-17T10:32:17.054+08:00|   0.5319929|
|2021-03-17T10:32:18.054+08:00|   0.9304316|
|2021-03-17T10:32:19.054+08:00|  -1.4800133|
|2021-03-17T10:32:20.054+08:00|   0.6114087|
|2021-03-17T10:32:21.054+08:00|   2.5163336|
|2021-03-17T10:32:22.054+08:00|  -1.0845392|
|2021-03-17T10:32:23.054+08:00|   1.0562582|
|2021-03-17T10:32:24.054+08:00|   1.3867859|
|2021-03-17T10:32:25.054+08:00| -0.45429882|
|2021-03-17T10:32:26.054+08:00|   1.0353678|
|2021-03-17T10:32:27.054+08:00|   0.7307929|
|2021-03-17T10:32:28.054+08:00|   2.3167255|
|2021-03-17T10:32:29.054+08:00|    2.342443|
|2021-03-17T10:32:30.054+08:00|   1.5809103|
|2021-03-17T10:32:31.054+08:00|   1.4829416|
|2021-03-17T10:32:32.054+08:00|   1.5800357|
|2021-03-17T10:32:33.054+08:00|   0.7124368|
|2021-03-17T10:32:34.054+08:00| -0.78597564|
|2021-03-17T10:32:35.054+08:00|   1.2058644|
|2021-03-17T10:32:36.054+08:00|   1.4215064|
|2021-03-17T10:32:37.054+08:00|   1.2808295|
|2021-03-17T10:32:38.054+08:00|  -0.6173715|
|2021-03-17T10:32:39.054+08:00|  0.06644377|
|2021-03-17T10:32:40.054+08:00|    2.349338|
|2021-03-17T10:32:41.054+08:00|   1.7335888|
|2021-03-17T10:32:42.054+08:00|   1.5872132|
............
Total line number = 10000

SQL for query:

select percentile(s0, "rank"="0.2", "error"="0.01") from root.test

Output series:

+-----------------------------+------------------------------------------------------+
|                         Time|percentile(root.test.s0, "rank"="0.2", "error"="0.01")|
+-----------------------------+------------------------------------------------------+
|2021-03-17T10:35:02.054+08:00|                                    0.1801469624042511|
+-----------------------------+------------------------------------------------------+

Quantile

Usage

The function is used to compute the approximate quantile of a numeric time series. A quantile is value of element in the certain rank of the sorted series.

Name: QUANTILE

Input Series: Only support a single input series. The data type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

Parameter:

  • rank: The rank of the quantile. It should be (0,1] and the default value is 0.5. For instance, a quantile with rank=0.5 is the median.
  • K: The size of KLL sketch maintained in the query. It should be within [100,+inf) and the default value is 800. For instance, the 0.5-quantile computed by a KLL sketch with K=800 items is a value with rank quantile 0.49~0.51 with a confidence of at least 99%. The result will be more accurate as K increases.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is the same as input series. The timestamp of the only data point is 0.

Note: Missing points, null points and NaN in the input series will be ignored.

Examples

Input series:

+-----------------------------+------------+
|                         Time|root.test.s0|
+-----------------------------+------------+
|2021-03-17T10:32:17.054+08:00|   0.5319929|
|2021-03-17T10:32:18.054+08:00|   0.9304316|
|2021-03-17T10:32:19.054+08:00|  -1.4800133|
|2021-03-17T10:32:20.054+08:00|   0.6114087|
|2021-03-17T10:32:21.054+08:00|   2.5163336|
|2021-03-17T10:32:22.054+08:00|  -1.0845392|
|2021-03-17T10:32:23.054+08:00|   1.0562582|
|2021-03-17T10:32:24.054+08:00|   1.3867859|
|2021-03-17T10:32:25.054+08:00| -0.45429882|
|2021-03-17T10:32:26.054+08:00|   1.0353678|
|2021-03-17T10:32:27.054+08:00|   0.7307929|
|2021-03-17T10:32:28.054+08:00|   2.3167255|
|2021-03-17T10:32:29.054+08:00|    2.342443|
|2021-03-17T10:32:30.054+08:00|   1.5809103|
|2021-03-17T10:32:31.054+08:00|   1.4829416|
|2021-03-17T10:32:32.054+08:00|   1.5800357|
|2021-03-17T10:32:33.054+08:00|   0.7124368|
|2021-03-17T10:32:34.054+08:00| -0.78597564|
|2021-03-17T10:32:35.054+08:00|   1.2058644|
|2021-03-17T10:32:36.054+08:00|   1.4215064|
|2021-03-17T10:32:37.054+08:00|   1.2808295|
|2021-03-17T10:32:38.054+08:00|  -0.6173715|
|2021-03-17T10:32:39.054+08:00|  0.06644377|
|2021-03-17T10:32:40.054+08:00|    2.349338|
|2021-03-17T10:32:41.054+08:00|   1.7335888|
|2021-03-17T10:32:42.054+08:00|   1.5872132|
............
Total line number = 10000

SQL for query:

select quantile(s0, "rank"="0.2", "K"="800") from root.test

Output series:

+-----------------------------+------------------------------------------------------+
|                         Time|quantile(root.test.s0, "rank"="0.2", "K"="800")|
+-----------------------------+------------------------------------------------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.000+08:00|                                    0.1801469624042511|
+-----------------------------+------------------------------------------------------+

Period

Usage

The function is used to compute the period of a numeric time series.

Name: PERIOD

Input Series: Only support a single input series. The data type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is INT32. There is only one data point in the series, whose timestamp is 0 and value is the period.

Examples

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d3.s1|
+-----------------------------+---------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.001+08:00|            1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.002+08:00|            2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.003+08:00|            3.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.004+08:00|            1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.005+08:00|            2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.006+08:00|            3.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.007+08:00|            1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.008+08:00|            2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.009+08:00|            3.0|
+-----------------------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select period(s1) from root.test.d3

Output series:

+-----------------------------+-----------------------+
|                         Time|period(root.test.d3.s1)|
+-----------------------------+-----------------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.000+08:00|                      3|
+-----------------------------+-----------------------+

QLB

Usage

This function is used to calculate Ljung-Box statistics $Q_{LB}$ for time series, and convert it to p value.

Name: QLB

Input Series: Only support a single input series. The type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

Parameters:

lag: max lag to calculate. Legal input shall be integer from 1 to n-2, where n is the sample number. Default value is n-2.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is DOUBLE. The output series is p value, and timestamp means lag.

Note: If you want to calculate Ljung-Box statistics $Q_{LB}$ instead of p value, you may use ACF function.

Examples

Using Default Parameter

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d1.s1|
+-----------------------------+---------------+
|1970-01-01T00:00:00.100+08:00|           1.22|
|1970-01-01T00:00:00.200+08:00|          -2.78|
|1970-01-01T00:00:00.300+08:00|           1.53|
|1970-01-01T00:00:00.400+08:00|           0.70|
|1970-01-01T00:00:00.500+08:00|           0.75|
|1970-01-01T00:00:00.600+08:00|          -0.72|
|1970-01-01T00:00:00.700+08:00|          -0.22|
|1970-01-01T00:00:00.800+08:00|           0.28|
|1970-01-01T00:00:00.900+08:00|           0.57|
|1970-01-01T00:00:01.000+08:00|          -0.22|
|1970-01-01T00:00:01.100+08:00|          -0.72|
|1970-01-01T00:00:01.200+08:00|           1.34|
|1970-01-01T00:00:01.300+08:00|          -0.25|
|1970-01-01T00:00:01.400+08:00|           0.17|
|1970-01-01T00:00:01.500+08:00|           2.51|
|1970-01-01T00:00:01.600+08:00|           1.42|
|1970-01-01T00:00:01.700+08:00|          -1.34|
|1970-01-01T00:00:01.800+08:00|          -0.01|
|1970-01-01T00:00:01.900+08:00|          -0.49|
|1970-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|           1.63|
+-----------------------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select QLB(s1) from root.test.d1

Output series:

+-----------------------------+--------------------+
|                         Time|QLB(root.test.d1.s1)|
+-----------------------------+--------------------+
|1970-01-01T00:00:00.001+08:00|  0.2168702295315677|
|1970-01-01T00:00:00.002+08:00|  0.3068948509261751|
|1970-01-01T00:00:00.003+08:00|  0.4217859150918444|
|1970-01-01T00:00:00.004+08:00|  0.5114539874276656|
|1970-01-01T00:00:00.005+08:00|  0.6560619525616759|
|1970-01-01T00:00:00.006+08:00|  0.7722398654053280|
|1970-01-01T00:00:00.007+08:00|  0.8532491661465290|
|1970-01-01T00:00:00.008+08:00|  0.9028575017542528|
|1970-01-01T00:00:00.009+08:00|  0.9434989988192729|
|1970-01-01T00:00:00.010+08:00|  0.8950280161464689|
|1970-01-01T00:00:00.011+08:00|  0.7701048398839656|
|1970-01-01T00:00:00.012+08:00|  0.7845536060001281|
|1970-01-01T00:00:00.013+08:00|  0.5943030981705825|
|1970-01-01T00:00:00.014+08:00|  0.4618413512531093|
|1970-01-01T00:00:00.015+08:00|  0.2645948244673964|
|1970-01-01T00:00:00.016+08:00|  0.3167530476666645|
|1970-01-01T00:00:00.017+08:00|  0.2330010780351453|
|1970-01-01T00:00:00.018+08:00|  0.0666611237622325|
+-----------------------------+--------------------+

Resample

Usage

This function is used to resample the input series according to a given frequency,
including up-sampling and down-sampling.
Currently, the supported up-sampling methods are
NaN (filling with NaN),
FFill (filling with previous value),
BFill (filling with next value) and
Linear (filling with linear interpolation).
Down-sampling relies on group aggregation,
which supports Max, Min, First, Last, Mean and Median.

Name: RESAMPLE

Input Series: Only support a single input series. The type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

Parameters:

  • every: The frequency of resampling, which is a positive number with an unit. The unit is 'ms' for millisecond, 's' for second, 'm' for minute, 'h' for hour and 'd' for day. This parameter cannot be lacked.
  • interp: The interpolation method of up-sampling, which is 'NaN', 'FFill', 'BFill' or 'Linear'. By default, NaN is used.
  • aggr: The aggregation method of down-sampling, which is 'Max', 'Min', 'First', 'Last', 'Mean' or 'Median'. By default, Mean is used.
  • start: The start time (inclusive) of resampling with the format 'yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss'. By default, it is the timestamp of the first valid data point.
  • end: The end time (exclusive) of resampling with the format 'yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss'. By default, it is the timestamp of the last valid data point.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is DOUBLE. It is strictly equispaced with the frequency every.

Note: NaN in the input series will be ignored.

Examples

Up-sampling

When the frequency of resampling is higher than the original frequency, up-sampling starts.

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d1.s1|
+-----------------------------+---------------+
|2021-03-06T16:00:00.000+08:00|           3.09|
|2021-03-06T16:15:00.000+08:00|           3.53|
|2021-03-06T16:30:00.000+08:00|            3.5|
|2021-03-06T16:45:00.000+08:00|           3.51|
|2021-03-06T17:00:00.000+08:00|           3.41|
+-----------------------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select resample(s1,'every'='5m','interp'='linear') from root.test.d1

Output series:

+-----------------------------+----------------------------------------------------------+
|                         Time|resample(root.test.d1.s1, "every"="5m", "interp"="linear")|
+-----------------------------+----------------------------------------------------------+
|2021-03-06T16:00:00.000+08:00|                                        3.0899999141693115|
|2021-03-06T16:05:00.000+08:00|                                        3.2366665999094644|
|2021-03-06T16:10:00.000+08:00|                                        3.3833332856496177|
|2021-03-06T16:15:00.000+08:00|                                        3.5299999713897705|
|2021-03-06T16:20:00.000+08:00|                                        3.5199999809265137|
|2021-03-06T16:25:00.000+08:00|                                         3.509999990463257|
|2021-03-06T16:30:00.000+08:00|                                                       3.5|
|2021-03-06T16:35:00.000+08:00|                                         3.503333330154419|
|2021-03-06T16:40:00.000+08:00|                                         3.506666660308838|
|2021-03-06T16:45:00.000+08:00|                                         3.509999990463257|
|2021-03-06T16:50:00.000+08:00|                                        3.4766666889190674|
|2021-03-06T16:55:00.000+08:00|                                         3.443333387374878|
|2021-03-06T17:00:00.000+08:00|                                        3.4100000858306885|
+-----------------------------+----------------------------------------------------------+
Down-sampling

When the frequency of resampling is lower than the original frequency, down-sampling starts.

Input series is the same as above, the SQL for query is shown below:

select resample(s1,'every'='30m','aggr'='first') from root.test.d1

Output series:

+-----------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------+
|                         Time|resample(root.test.d1.s1, "every"="30m", "aggr"="first")|
+-----------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------+
|2021-03-06T16:00:00.000+08:00|                                      3.0899999141693115|
|2021-03-06T16:30:00.000+08:00|                                                     3.5|
|2021-03-06T17:00:00.000+08:00|                                      3.4100000858306885|
+-----------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------+
Specify the time period

The time period of resampling can be specified with start and end.
The period outside the actual time range will be interpolated.

Input series is the same as above, the SQL for query is shown below:

select resample(s1,'every'='30m','start'='2021-03-06 15:00:00') from root.test.d1

Output series:

+-----------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
|                         Time|resample(root.test.d1.s1, "every"="30m", "start"="2021-03-06 15:00:00")|
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
|2021-03-06T15:00:00.000+08:00|                                                                    NaN|
|2021-03-06T15:30:00.000+08:00|                                                                    NaN|
|2021-03-06T16:00:00.000+08:00|                                                      3.309999942779541|
|2021-03-06T16:30:00.000+08:00|                                                     3.5049999952316284|
|2021-03-06T17:00:00.000+08:00|                                                     3.4100000858306885|
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+

Sample

Usage

This function is used to sample the input series,
that is, select a specified number of data points from the input series and output them.
Currently, three sampling methods are supported:
Reservoir sampling randomly selects data points.
All of the points have the same probability of being sampled.
Isometric sampling selects data points at equal index intervals.
Triangle sampling assigns data points to the buckets based on the number of sampling.
Then it calculates the area of the triangle based on these points inside the bucket and selects the point with the largest area of the triangle.
For more detail, please read paperopen in new window

Name: SAMPLE

Input Series: Only support a single input series. The type is arbitrary.

Parameters:

  • method: The method of sampling, which is 'reservoir', 'isometric' or 'triangle'. By default, reservoir sampling is used.
  • k: The number of sampling, which is a positive integer. By default, it's 1.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is the same as the input. The length of the output series is k. Each data point in the output series comes from the input series.

Note: If k is greater than the length of input series, all data points in the input series will be output.

Examples

Reservoir Sampling

When method is 'reservoir' or the default, reservoir sampling is used.
Due to the randomness of this method, the output series shown below is only a possible result.

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d1.s1|
+-----------------------------+---------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:01.000+08:00|            1.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|            2.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:03.000+08:00|            3.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:04.000+08:00|            4.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:05.000+08:00|            5.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:06.000+08:00|            6.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:07.000+08:00|            7.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:08.000+08:00|            8.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:09.000+08:00|            9.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:10.000+08:00|           10.0|
+-----------------------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select sample(s1,'method'='reservoir','k'='5') from root.test.d1

Output series:

+-----------------------------+------------------------------------------------------+
|                         Time|sample(root.test.d1.s1, "method"="reservoir", "k"="5")|
+-----------------------------+------------------------------------------------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|                                                   2.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:03.000+08:00|                                                   3.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:05.000+08:00|                                                   5.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:08.000+08:00|                                                   8.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:10.000+08:00|                                                  10.0|
+-----------------------------+------------------------------------------------------+
Isometric Sampling

When method is 'isometric', isometric sampling is used.

Input series is the same as above, the SQL for query is shown below:

select sample(s1,'method'='isometric','k'='5') from root.test.d1

Output series:

+-----------------------------+------------------------------------------------------+
|                         Time|sample(root.test.d1.s1, "method"="isometric", "k"="5")|
+-----------------------------+------------------------------------------------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:01.000+08:00|                                                   1.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:03.000+08:00|                                                   3.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:05.000+08:00|                                                   5.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:07.000+08:00|                                                   7.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:09.000+08:00|                                                   9.0|
+-----------------------------+------------------------------------------------------+

Segment

Usage

This function is used to segment a time series into subsequences according to linear trend, and returns linear fitted values of first values in each subsequence or every data point.

Name: SEGMENT

Input Series: Only support a single input series. The type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

Parameters:

  • output :"all" to output all fitted points; "first" to output first fitted points in each subsequence.

  • error: error allowed at linear regression. It is defined as mean absolute error of a subsequence.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is DOUBLE.

Note: This function treat input series as equal-interval sampled. All data are loaded, so downsample input series first if there are too many data points.

Examples

Input series:

+-----------------------------+------------+
|                         Time|root.test.s1|
+-----------------------------+------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.000+08:00|         5.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.100+08:00|         0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.200+08:00|         1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.300+08:00|         2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.400+08:00|         3.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.500+08:00|         4.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.600+08:00|         5.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.700+08:00|         6.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.800+08:00|         7.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.900+08:00|         8.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.000+08:00|         9.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.100+08:00|         9.1|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.200+08:00|         9.2|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.300+08:00|         9.3|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.400+08:00|         9.4|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.500+08:00|         9.5|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.600+08:00|         9.6|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.700+08:00|         9.7|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.800+08:00|         9.8|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.900+08:00|         9.9|
|1970-01-01T08:00:02.000+08:00|        10.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:02.100+08:00|         8.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:02.200+08:00|         6.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:02.300+08:00|         4.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:02.400+08:00|         2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:02.500+08:00|         0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:02.600+08:00|        -2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:02.700+08:00|        -4.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:02.800+08:00|        -6.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:02.900+08:00|        -8.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:03.000+08:00|       -10.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:03.100+08:00|        10.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:03.200+08:00|        10.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:03.300+08:00|        10.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:03.400+08:00|        10.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:03.500+08:00|        10.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:03.600+08:00|        10.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:03.700+08:00|        10.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:03.800+08:00|        10.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:03.900+08:00|        10.0|
+-----------------------------+------------+

SQL for query:

select segment(s1, "error"="0.1") from root.test

Output series:

+-----------------------------+------------------------------------+
|                         Time|segment(root.test.s1, "error"="0.1")|
+-----------------------------+------------------------------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.000+08:00|                                 5.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.200+08:00|                                 1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.000+08:00|                                 9.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:02.000+08:00|                                10.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:03.000+08:00|                               -10.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:03.200+08:00|                                10.0|
+-----------------------------+------------------------------------+

Skew

Usage

This function is used to calculate the population skewness.

Name: SKEW

Input Series: Only support a single input series. The type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is DOUBLE. There is only one data point in the series, whose timestamp is 0 and value is the population skewness.

Note: Missing points, null points and NaN in the input series will be ignored.

Examples

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d1.s1|
+-----------------------------+---------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:00.000+08:00|            1.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:01.000+08:00|            2.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|            3.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:03.000+08:00|            4.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:04.000+08:00|            5.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:05.000+08:00|            6.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:06.000+08:00|            7.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:07.000+08:00|            8.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:08.000+08:00|            9.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:09.000+08:00|           10.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:10.000+08:00|           10.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:11.000+08:00|           10.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:12.000+08:00|           10.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:13.000+08:00|           10.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:14.000+08:00|           10.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:15.000+08:00|           10.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:16.000+08:00|           10.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:17.000+08:00|           10.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:18.000+08:00|           10.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:19.000+08:00|           10.0|
+-----------------------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select skew(s1) from root.test.d1

Output series:

+-----------------------------+-----------------------+
|                         Time|  skew(root.test.d1.s1)|
+-----------------------------+-----------------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.000+08:00|    -0.9998427402292644|
+-----------------------------+-----------------------+

Spline

Usage

This function is used to calculate cubic spline interpolation of input series.

Name: SPLINE

Input Series: Only support a single input series. The type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

  • points: Number of resampling points.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is DOUBLE.

Note: Output series retains the first and last timestamps of input series. Interpolation points are selected at equal intervals. The function tries to calculate only when there are no less than 4 points in input series.

Examples

Assigning number of interpolation points

Input series:

+-----------------------------+------------+
|                         Time|root.test.s1|
+-----------------------------+------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.000+08:00|         0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.300+08:00|         1.2|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.500+08:00|         1.7|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.700+08:00|         2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.900+08:00|         2.1|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.100+08:00|         2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.200+08:00|         1.8|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.300+08:00|         1.2|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.400+08:00|         1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.500+08:00|         1.6|
+-----------------------------+------------+

SQL for query:

select spline(s1, "points"="151") from root.test

Output series:

+-----------------------------+------------------------------------+
|                         Time|spline(root.test.s1, "points"="151")|
+-----------------------------+------------------------------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.000+08:00|                                 0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.010+08:00|                 0.04870000251134237|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.020+08:00|                 0.09680000495910646|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.030+08:00|                 0.14430000734329226|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.040+08:00|                 0.19120000966389972|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.050+08:00|                 0.23750001192092896|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.060+08:00|                  0.2832000141143799|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.070+08:00|                 0.32830001624425253|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.080+08:00|                  0.3728000183105469|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.090+08:00|                   0.416700020313263|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.100+08:00|                  0.4600000222524008|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.110+08:00|                  0.5027000241279602|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.120+08:00|                  0.5448000259399414|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.130+08:00|                  0.5863000276883443|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.140+08:00|                   0.627200029373169|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.150+08:00|                  0.6675000309944153|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.160+08:00|                  0.7072000325520833|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.170+08:00|                  0.7463000340461731|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.180+08:00|                  0.7848000354766846|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.190+08:00|                  0.8227000368436178|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.200+08:00|                  0.8600000381469728|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.210+08:00|                  0.8967000393867494|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.220+08:00|                  0.9328000405629477|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.230+08:00|                  0.9683000416755676|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.240+08:00|                  1.0032000427246095|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.250+08:00|                   1.037500043710073|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.260+08:00|                   1.071200044631958|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.270+08:00|                  1.1043000454902647|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.280+08:00|                  1.1368000462849934|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.290+08:00|                  1.1687000470161437|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.300+08:00|                  1.2000000476837158|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.310+08:00|                  1.2307000483103594|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.320+08:00|                  1.2608000489139557|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.330+08:00|                  1.2903000494873524|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.340+08:00|                  1.3192000500233967|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.350+08:00|                  1.3475000505149364|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.360+08:00|                  1.3752000509548186|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.370+08:00|                   1.402300051335891|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.380+08:00|                  1.4288000516510009|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.390+08:00|                  1.4547000518929958|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.400+08:00|                   1.480000052054723|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.410+08:00|                  1.5047000521290301|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.420+08:00|                  1.5288000521087646|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.430+08:00|                  1.5523000519867738|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.440+08:00|                   1.575200051755905|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.450+08:00|                   1.597500051409006|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.460+08:00|                   1.619200050938924|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.470+08:00|                  1.6403000503385066|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.480+08:00|                   1.660800049600601|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.490+08:00|                   1.680700048718055|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.500+08:00|                  1.7000000476837158|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.510+08:00|                  1.7188475466453037|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.520+08:00|                  1.7373800457262996|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.530+08:00|                  1.7555825448831923|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.540+08:00|                  1.7734400440724702|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.550+08:00|                   1.790937543250622|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.560+08:00|                  1.8080600423741364|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.570+08:00|                  1.8247925413995016|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.580+08:00|                  1.8411200402832066|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.590+08:00|                  1.8570275389817397|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.600+08:00|                  1.8725000374515897|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.610+08:00|                  1.8875225356492449|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.620+08:00|                   1.902080033531194|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.630+08:00|                  1.9161575310539258|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.640+08:00|                  1.9297400281739288|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.650+08:00|                  1.9428125248476913|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.660+08:00|                  1.9553600210317021|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.670+08:00|                    1.96736751668245|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.680+08:00|                  1.9788200117564232|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.690+08:00|                  1.9897025062101101|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.700+08:00|                                 2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.710+08:00|                  2.0097024933913334|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.720+08:00|                  2.0188199867081615|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.730+08:00|                   2.027367479995188|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.740+08:00|                  2.0353599732971155|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.750+08:00|                  2.0428124666586482|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.760+08:00|                   2.049739960124489|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.770+08:00|                   2.056157453739342|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.780+08:00|                    2.06207994754791|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.790+08:00|                   2.067522441594897|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.800+08:00|                   2.072499935925006|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.810+08:00|                    2.07702743058294|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.820+08:00|                   2.081119925613404|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.830+08:00|                     2.0847924210611|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.840+08:00|                  2.0880599169707317|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.850+08:00|                  2.0909374133870027|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.860+08:00|                  2.0934399103546166|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.870+08:00|                  2.0955824079182768|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.880+08:00|                  2.0973799061226863|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.890+08:00|                   2.098847405012549|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.900+08:00|                  2.0999999046325684|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.910+08:00|                  2.1005574051201332|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.920+08:00|                  2.1002599065303778|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.930+08:00|                  2.0991524087846245|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.940+08:00|                  2.0972799118041947|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.950+08:00|                  2.0946874155104105|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.960+08:00|                  2.0914199198245944|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.970+08:00|                  2.0875224246680673|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.980+08:00|                   2.083039929962151|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.990+08:00|                  2.0780174356281687|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.000+08:00|                  2.0724999415874406|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.010+08:00|                    2.06653244776129|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.020+08:00|                   2.060159954071038|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.030+08:00|                   2.053427460438006|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.040+08:00|                   2.046379966783517|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.050+08:00|                  2.0390624730288924|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.060+08:00|                   2.031519979095454|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.070+08:00|                  2.0237974849045237|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.080+08:00|                   2.015939990377423|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.090+08:00|                  2.0079924954354746|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.100+08:00|                                 2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.110+08:00|                  1.9907018211101906|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.120+08:00|                  1.9788509124245144|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.130+08:00|                  1.9645127287932083|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.140+08:00|                  1.9477527250665083|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.150+08:00|                  1.9286363560946513|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.160+08:00|                  1.9072290767278735|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.170+08:00|                  1.8835963418164114|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.180+08:00|                  1.8578036062105014|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.190+08:00|                  1.8299163247603802|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.200+08:00|                  1.7999999523162842|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.210+08:00|                  1.7623635841923329|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.220+08:00|                  1.7129696477516976|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.230+08:00|                  1.6543635959181928|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.240+08:00|                  1.5890908816156328|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.250+08:00|                  1.5196969577678319|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.260+08:00|                  1.4487272772986044|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.270+08:00|                  1.3787272931317647|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.280+08:00|                  1.3122424581911272|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.290+08:00|                   1.251818225400506|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.300+08:00|                  1.2000000476837158|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.310+08:00|                  1.1548000470995912|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.320+08:00|                  1.1130667107899999|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.330+08:00|                  1.0756000393033045|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.340+08:00|                   1.043200033187868|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.350+08:00|                   1.016666692992053|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.360+08:00|                  0.9968000192642223|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.370+08:00|                  0.9844000125527389|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.380+08:00|                  0.9802666734059655|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.390+08:00|                  0.9852000023722649|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.400+08:00|                                 1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.410+08:00|                   1.023999999165535|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.420+08:00|                  1.0559999990463256|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.430+08:00|                  1.0959999996423722|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.440+08:00|                  1.1440000009536744|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.450+08:00|                  1.2000000029802322|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.460+08:00|                   1.264000005722046|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.470+08:00|                  1.3360000091791153|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.480+08:00|                  1.4160000133514405|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.490+08:00|                  1.5040000182390214|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.500+08:00|                   1.600000023841858|
+-----------------------------+------------------------------------+

Spread

Usage

This function is used to calculate the spread of time series, that is, the maximum value minus the minimum value.

Name: SPREAD

Input Series: Only support a single input series. The type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is the same as the input. There is only one data point in the series, whose timestamp is 0 and value is the spread.

Note: Missing points, null points and NaN in the input series will be ignored.

Examples

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d1.s1|
+-----------------------------+---------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|          100.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:03.000+08:00|          101.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:04.000+08:00|          102.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:06.000+08:00|          104.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:08.000+08:00|          126.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:10.000+08:00|          108.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:14.000+08:00|          112.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:15.000+08:00|          113.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:16.000+08:00|          114.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:18.000+08:00|          116.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:20.000+08:00|          118.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:22.000+08:00|          120.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:26.000+08:00|          124.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:28.000+08:00|          126.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:30.000+08:00|            NaN|
+-----------------------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select spread(s1) from root.test.d1 where time <= 2020-01-01 00:00:30

Output series:

+-----------------------------+-----------------------+
|                         Time|spread(root.test.d1.s1)|
+-----------------------------+-----------------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.000+08:00|                   26.0|
+-----------------------------+-----------------------+

Stddev

Usage

This function is used to calculate the population standard deviation.

Name: STDDEV

Input Series: Only support a single input series. The type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is DOUBLE. There is only one data point in the series, whose timestamp is 0 and value is the population standard deviation.

Note: Missing points, null points and NaN in the input series will be ignored.

Examples

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d1.s1|
+-----------------------------+---------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:00.000+08:00|            1.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:01.000+08:00|            2.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|            3.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:03.000+08:00|            4.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:04.000+08:00|            5.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:05.000+08:00|            6.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:06.000+08:00|            7.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:07.000+08:00|            8.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:08.000+08:00|            9.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:09.000+08:00|           10.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:10.000+08:00|           11.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:11.000+08:00|           12.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:12.000+08:00|           13.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:13.000+08:00|           14.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:14.000+08:00|           15.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:15.000+08:00|           16.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:16.000+08:00|           17.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:17.000+08:00|           18.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:18.000+08:00|           19.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:19.000+08:00|           20.0|
+-----------------------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select stddev(s1) from root.test.d1

Output series:

+-----------------------------+-----------------------+
|                         Time|stddev(root.test.d1.s1)|
+-----------------------------+-----------------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.000+08:00|     5.7662812973353965|
+-----------------------------+-----------------------+

ZScore

Usage

This function is used to standardize the input series with z-score.

Name: ZSCORE

Input Series: Only support a single input series. The type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

  • compute: When set to "batch", anomaly test is conducted after importing all data points; when set to "stream", it is required to provide mean and standard deviation. The default method is "batch".
  • avg: Mean value when method is set to "stream".
  • sd: Standard deviation when method is set to "stream".

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is DOUBLE.

Examples

Batch computing

Input series:

+-----------------------------+------------+
|                         Time|root.test.s1|
+-----------------------------+------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.100+08:00|         0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.200+08:00|         0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.300+08:00|         1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.400+08:00|        -1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.500+08:00|         0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.600+08:00|         0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.700+08:00|        -2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.800+08:00|         2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.900+08:00|         0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.000+08:00|         0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.100+08:00|         1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.200+08:00|        -1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.300+08:00|        -1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.400+08:00|         1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.500+08:00|         0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.600+08:00|         0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.700+08:00|        10.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.800+08:00|         2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.900+08:00|        -2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:02.000+08:00|         0.0|
+-----------------------------+------------+

SQL for query:

select zscore(s1) from root.test

Output series:

+-----------------------------+--------------------+
|                         Time|zscore(root.test.s1)|
+-----------------------------+--------------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.100+08:00|-0.20672455764868078|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.200+08:00|-0.20672455764868078|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.300+08:00| 0.20672455764868078|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.400+08:00| -0.6201736729460423|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.500+08:00|-0.20672455764868078|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.600+08:00|-0.20672455764868078|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.700+08:00|  -1.033622788243404|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.800+08:00|  0.6201736729460423|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.900+08:00|-0.20672455764868078|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.000+08:00|-0.20672455764868078|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.100+08:00| 0.20672455764868078|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.200+08:00| -0.6201736729460423|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.300+08:00| -0.6201736729460423|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.400+08:00| 0.20672455764868078|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.500+08:00|-0.20672455764868078|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.600+08:00|-0.20672455764868078|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.700+08:00|  3.9277665953249348|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.800+08:00|  0.6201736729460423|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.900+08:00|  -1.033622788243404|
|1970-01-01T08:00:02.000+08:00|-0.20672455764868078|
+-----------------------------+--------------------+

Anomaly Detection

IQR

Usage

This function is used to detect anomalies based on IQR. Points distributing beyond 1.5 times IQR are selected.

Name: IQR

Input Series: Only support a single input series. The type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

  • method: When set to "batch", anomaly test is conducted after importing all data points; when set to "stream", it is required to provide upper and lower quantiles. The default method is "batch".
  • q1: The lower quantile when method is set to "stream".
  • q3: The upper quantile when method is set to "stream".

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is DOUBLE.

Note: $IQR=Q_3-Q_1$

Examples

Batch computing

Input series:

+-----------------------------+------------+
|                         Time|root.test.s1|
+-----------------------------+------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.100+08:00|         0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.200+08:00|         0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.300+08:00|         1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.400+08:00|        -1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.500+08:00|         0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.600+08:00|         0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.700+08:00|        -2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.800+08:00|         2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.900+08:00|         0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.000+08:00|         0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.100+08:00|         1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.200+08:00|        -1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.300+08:00|        -1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.400+08:00|         1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.500+08:00|         0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.600+08:00|         0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.700+08:00|        10.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.800+08:00|         2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.900+08:00|        -2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:02.000+08:00|         0.0|
+-----------------------------+------------+

SQL for query:

select iqr(s1) from root.test

Output series:

+-----------------------------+-----------------+
|                         Time|iqr(root.test.s1)|
+-----------------------------+-----------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.700+08:00|             10.0|
+-----------------------------+-----------------+

KSigma

Usage

This function is used to detect anomalies based on the Dynamic K-Sigma Algorithm.
Within a sliding window, the input value with a deviation of more than k times the standard deviation from the average will be output as anomaly.

Name: KSIGMA

Input Series: Only support a single input series. The type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

  • k: How many times to multiply on standard deviation to define anomaly, the default value is 3.
  • window: The window size of Dynamic K-Sigma Algorithm, the default value is 10000.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is same as input series.

Note: Only when is larger than 0, the anomaly detection will be performed. Otherwise, nothing will be output.

Examples

Assigning k

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d1.s1|
+-----------------------------+---------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|            0.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:03.000+08:00|           50.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:04.000+08:00|          100.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:06.000+08:00|          150.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:08.000+08:00|          200.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:10.000+08:00|          200.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:14.000+08:00|          200.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:15.000+08:00|          200.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:16.000+08:00|          200.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:18.000+08:00|          200.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:20.000+08:00|          150.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:22.000+08:00|          100.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:26.000+08:00|           50.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:28.000+08:00|            0.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:30.000+08:00|            NaN|
+-----------------------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select ksigma(s1,"k"="1.0") from root.test.d1 where time <= 2020-01-01 00:00:30

Output series:

+-----------------------------+---------------------------------+
|Time                         |ksigma(root.test.d1.s1,"k"="3.0")|
+-----------------------------+---------------------------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|                              0.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:03.000+08:00|                             50.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:26.000+08:00|                             50.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:28.000+08:00|                              0.0|
+-----------------------------+---------------------------------+

LOF

Usage

This function is used to detect density anomaly of time series. According to k-th distance calculation parameter and local outlier factor (lof) threshold, the function judges if a set of input values is an density anomaly, and a bool mark of anomaly values will be output.

Name: LOF

Input Series: Multiple input series. The type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

  • method:assign a detection method. The default value is "default", when input data has multiple dimensions. The alternative is "series", when a input series will be transformed to high dimension.
  • k:use the k-th distance to calculate lof. Default value is 3.
  • window: size of window to split origin data points. Default value is 10000.
  • windowsize:dimension that will be transformed into when method is "series". The default value is 5.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is DOUBLE.

Note: Incomplete rows will be ignored. They are neither calculated nor marked as anomaly.

Examples

Using default parameters

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d1.s1|root.test.d1.s2|
+-----------------------------+---------------+---------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.100+08:00|            0.0|            0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.200+08:00|            0.0|            1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.300+08:00|            1.0|            1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.400+08:00|            1.0|            0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.500+08:00|            0.0|           -1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.600+08:00|           -1.0|           -1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.700+08:00|           -1.0|            0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.800+08:00|            2.0|            2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.900+08:00|            0.0|           null|
+-----------------------------+---------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select lof(s1,s2) from root.test.d1 where time<1000

Output series:

+-----------------------------+-------------------------------------+
|                         Time|lof(root.test.d1.s1, root.test.d1.s2)|
+-----------------------------+-------------------------------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.100+08:00|                   3.8274824267668244|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.200+08:00|                   3.0117631741126156|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.300+08:00|                    2.838155437762879|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.400+08:00|                   3.0117631741126156|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.500+08:00|                     2.73518261244453|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.600+08:00|                    2.371440975708148|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.700+08:00|                     2.73518261244453|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.800+08:00|                   1.7561416374270742|
+-----------------------------+-------------------------------------+
Diagnosing 1d timeseries

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d1.s1|
+-----------------------------+---------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.100+08:00|            1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.200+08:00|            2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.300+08:00|            3.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.400+08:00|            4.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.500+08:00|            5.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.600+08:00|            6.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.700+08:00|            7.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.800+08:00|            8.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.900+08:00|            9.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.000+08:00|           10.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.100+08:00|           11.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.200+08:00|           12.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.300+08:00|           13.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.400+08:00|           14.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.500+08:00|           15.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.600+08:00|           16.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.700+08:00|           17.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.800+08:00|           18.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.900+08:00|           19.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:02.000+08:00|           20.0|
+-----------------------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select lof(s1, "method"="series") from root.test.d1 where time<1000

Output series:

+-----------------------------+--------------------+
|                         Time|lof(root.test.d1.s1)|
+-----------------------------+--------------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.100+08:00|    3.77777777777778|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.200+08:00|    4.32727272727273|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.300+08:00|    4.85714285714286|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.400+08:00|    5.40909090909091|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.500+08:00|    5.94999999999999|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.600+08:00|    6.43243243243243|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.700+08:00|    6.79999999999999|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.800+08:00|                 7.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.900+08:00|                 7.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.000+08:00|    6.79999999999999|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.100+08:00|    6.43243243243243|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.200+08:00|    5.94999999999999|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.300+08:00|    5.40909090909091|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.400+08:00|    4.85714285714286|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.500+08:00|    4.32727272727273|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.600+08:00|    3.77777777777778|
+-----------------------------+--------------------+

MissDetect

Usage

This function is used to detect missing anomalies.
In some datasets, missing values are filled by linear interpolation.
Thus, there are several long perfect linear segments.
By discovering these perfect linear segments,
missing anomalies are detected.

Name: MISSDETECT

Input Series: Only support a single input series. The data type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

Parameter:

error: The minimum length of the detected missing anomalies, which is an integer greater than or equal to 10. By default, it is 10.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is BOOLEAN. Each data point which is miss anomaly will be labeled as true.

Examples

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d2.s2|
+-----------------------------+---------------+
|2021-07-01T12:00:00.000+08:00|            0.0|
|2021-07-01T12:00:01.000+08:00|            1.0|
|2021-07-01T12:00:02.000+08:00|            0.0|
|2021-07-01T12:00:03.000+08:00|            1.0|
|2021-07-01T12:00:04.000+08:00|            0.0|
|2021-07-01T12:00:05.000+08:00|            0.0|
|2021-07-01T12:00:06.000+08:00|            0.0|
|2021-07-01T12:00:07.000+08:00|            0.0|
|2021-07-01T12:00:08.000+08:00|            0.0|
|2021-07-01T12:00:09.000+08:00|            0.0|
|2021-07-01T12:00:10.000+08:00|            0.0|
|2021-07-01T12:00:11.000+08:00|            0.0|
|2021-07-01T12:00:12.000+08:00|            0.0|
|2021-07-01T12:00:13.000+08:00|            0.0|
|2021-07-01T12:00:14.000+08:00|            0.0|
|2021-07-01T12:00:15.000+08:00|            0.0|
|2021-07-01T12:00:16.000+08:00|            1.0|
|2021-07-01T12:00:17.000+08:00|            0.0|
|2021-07-01T12:00:18.000+08:00|            1.0|
|2021-07-01T12:00:19.000+08:00|            0.0|
|2021-07-01T12:00:20.000+08:00|            1.0|
+-----------------------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select missdetect(s2,'minlen'='10') from root.test.d2

Output series:

+-----------------------------+------------------------------------------+
|                         Time|missdetect(root.test.d2.s2, "minlen"="10")|
+-----------------------------+------------------------------------------+
|2021-07-01T12:00:00.000+08:00|                                     false|
|2021-07-01T12:00:01.000+08:00|                                     false|
|2021-07-01T12:00:02.000+08:00|                                     false|
|2021-07-01T12:00:03.000+08:00|                                     false|
|2021-07-01T12:00:04.000+08:00|                                      true|
|2021-07-01T12:00:05.000+08:00|                                      true|
|2021-07-01T12:00:06.000+08:00|                                      true|
|2021-07-01T12:00:07.000+08:00|                                      true|
|2021-07-01T12:00:08.000+08:00|                                      true|
|2021-07-01T12:00:09.000+08:00|                                      true|
|2021-07-01T12:00:10.000+08:00|                                      true|
|2021-07-01T12:00:11.000+08:00|                                      true|
|2021-07-01T12:00:12.000+08:00|                                      true|
|2021-07-01T12:00:13.000+08:00|                                      true|
|2021-07-01T12:00:14.000+08:00|                                      true|
|2021-07-01T12:00:15.000+08:00|                                      true|
|2021-07-01T12:00:16.000+08:00|                                     false|
|2021-07-01T12:00:17.000+08:00|                                     false|
|2021-07-01T12:00:18.000+08:00|                                     false|
|2021-07-01T12:00:19.000+08:00|                                     false|
|2021-07-01T12:00:20.000+08:00|                                     false|
+-----------------------------+------------------------------------------+

Range

Usage

This function is used to detect range anomaly of time series. According to upper bound and lower bound parameters, the function judges if a input value is beyond range, aka range anomaly, and a new time series of anomaly will be output.

Name: RANGE

Input Series: Only support a single input series. The type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

  • lower_bound:lower bound of range anomaly detection.
  • upper_bound:upper bound of range anomaly detection.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is the same as the input.

Note: Only when upper_bound is larger than lower_bound, the anomaly detection will be performed. Otherwise, nothing will be output.

Examples

Assigning Lower and Upper Bound

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d1.s1|
+-----------------------------+---------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|          100.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:03.000+08:00|          101.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:04.000+08:00|          102.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:06.000+08:00|          104.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:08.000+08:00|          126.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:10.000+08:00|          108.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:14.000+08:00|          112.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:15.000+08:00|          113.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:16.000+08:00|          114.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:18.000+08:00|          116.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:20.000+08:00|          118.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:22.000+08:00|          120.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:26.000+08:00|          124.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:28.000+08:00|          126.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:30.000+08:00|            NaN|
+-----------------------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select range(s1,"lower_bound"="101.0","upper_bound"="125.0") from root.test.d1 where time <= 2020-01-01 00:00:30

Output series:

+-----------------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------+
|Time                         |range(root.test.d1.s1,"lower_bound"="101.0","upper_bound"="125.0")|
+-----------------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|                                                             100.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:28.000+08:00|                                                             126.0|
+-----------------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------+

TwoSidedFilter

Usage

The function is used to filter anomalies of a numeric time series based on two-sided window detection.

Name: TWOSIDEDFILTER

Input Series: Only support a single input series. The data type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is the same as the input. It is the input without anomalies.

Parameter:

  • len: The size of the window, which is a positive integer. By default, it's 5. When len=3, the algorithm detects forward window and backward window with length 3 and calculates the outlierness of the current point.

  • threshold: The threshold of outlierness, which is a floating number in (0,1). By default, it's 0.3. The strict standard of detecting anomalies is in proportion to the threshold.

Examples

Input series:

+-----------------------------+------------+
|                         Time|root.test.s0|
+-----------------------------+------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.000+08:00|      2002.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.000+08:00|      1946.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:02.000+08:00|      1958.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:03.000+08:00|      2012.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:04.000+08:00|      2051.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:05.000+08:00|      1898.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:06.000+08:00|      2014.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:07.000+08:00|      2052.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:08.000+08:00|      1935.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:09.000+08:00|      1901.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:10.000+08:00|      1972.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:11.000+08:00|      1969.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:12.000+08:00|      1984.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:13.000+08:00|      2018.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:37.000+08:00|      1484.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:38.000+08:00|      1055.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:39.000+08:00|      1050.0|
|1970-01-01T08:01:05.000+08:00|      1023.0|
|1970-01-01T08:01:06.000+08:00|      1056.0|
|1970-01-01T08:01:07.000+08:00|       978.0|
|1970-01-01T08:01:08.000+08:00|      1050.0|
|1970-01-01T08:01:09.000+08:00|      1123.0|
|1970-01-01T08:01:10.000+08:00|      1150.0|
|1970-01-01T08:01:11.000+08:00|      1034.0|
|1970-01-01T08:01:12.000+08:00|       950.0|
|1970-01-01T08:01:13.000+08:00|      1059.0|
+-----------------------------+------------+

SQL for query:

select TwoSidedFilter(s0, 'len'='5', 'threshold'='0.3') from root.test

Output series:

+-----------------------------+------------+
|                         Time|root.test.s0|
+-----------------------------+------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.000+08:00|      2002.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.000+08:00|      1946.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:02.000+08:00|      1958.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:03.000+08:00|      2012.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:04.000+08:00|      2051.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:05.000+08:00|      1898.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:06.000+08:00|      2014.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:07.000+08:00|      2052.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:08.000+08:00|      1935.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:09.000+08:00|      1901.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:10.000+08:00|      1972.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:11.000+08:00|      1969.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:12.000+08:00|      1984.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:13.000+08:00|      2018.0|
|1970-01-01T08:01:05.000+08:00|      1023.0|
|1970-01-01T08:01:06.000+08:00|      1056.0|
|1970-01-01T08:01:07.000+08:00|       978.0|
|1970-01-01T08:01:08.000+08:00|      1050.0|
|1970-01-01T08:01:09.000+08:00|      1123.0|
|1970-01-01T08:01:10.000+08:00|      1150.0|
|1970-01-01T08:01:11.000+08:00|      1034.0|
|1970-01-01T08:01:12.000+08:00|       950.0|
|1970-01-01T08:01:13.000+08:00|      1059.0|
+-----------------------------+------------+

Outlier

Usage

This function is used to detect distance-based outliers. For each point in the current window, if the number of its neighbors within the distance of neighbor distance threshold is less than the neighbor count threshold, the point in detected as an outlier.

Name: OUTLIER

Input Series: Only support a single input series. The type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

  • r:the neighbor distance threshold.
  • k:the neighbor count threshold.
  • w:the window size.
  • s:the slide size.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is the same as the input.

Examples

Assigning Parameters of Queries

Input series:

+-----------------------------+------------+
|                         Time|root.test.s1|
+-----------------------------+------------+
|2020-01-04T23:59:55.000+08:00|        56.0|
|2020-01-04T23:59:56.000+08:00|        55.1|
|2020-01-04T23:59:57.000+08:00|        54.2|
|2020-01-04T23:59:58.000+08:00|        56.3|
|2020-01-04T23:59:59.000+08:00|        59.0|
|2020-01-05T00:00:00.000+08:00|        60.0|
|2020-01-05T00:00:01.000+08:00|        60.5|
|2020-01-05T00:00:02.000+08:00|        64.5|
|2020-01-05T00:00:03.000+08:00|        69.0|
|2020-01-05T00:00:04.000+08:00|        64.2|
|2020-01-05T00:00:05.000+08:00|        62.3|
|2020-01-05T00:00:06.000+08:00|        58.0|
|2020-01-05T00:00:07.000+08:00|        58.9|
|2020-01-05T00:00:08.000+08:00|        52.0|
|2020-01-05T00:00:09.000+08:00|        62.3|
|2020-01-05T00:00:10.000+08:00|        61.0|
|2020-01-05T00:00:11.000+08:00|        64.2|
|2020-01-05T00:00:12.000+08:00|        61.8|
|2020-01-05T00:00:13.000+08:00|        64.0|
|2020-01-05T00:00:14.000+08:00|        63.0|
+-----------------------------+------------+

SQL for query:

select outlier(s1,"r"="5.0","k"="4","w"="10","s"="5") from root.test

Output series:

+-----------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------+
|                         Time|outlier(root.test.s1,"r"="5.0","k"="4","w"="10","s"="5")|
+-----------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------+
|2020-01-05T00:00:03.000+08:00|                                                    69.0|
+-----------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------+
|2020-01-05T00:00:08.000+08:00|                                                    52.0|
+-----------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------+

MasterTrain

Usage

This function is used to train the VAR model based on master data. The model is trained on learning samples consisting of p+1 consecutive non-error points.

Name: MasterTrain

Input Series: Support multiple input series. The types are are in INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

Parameters:

  • p: The order of the model.
  • eta: The distance threshold. By default, it will be estimated based on the 3-sigma rule.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is the same as the input.

Installation

  • Install IoTDB from branch research/master-detector.
  • Run mvn clean package -am -Dmaven.test.skip=true.
  • Copy ./distribution/target/apache-iotdb-1.2.0-SNAPSHOT-library-udf-bin/apache-iotdb-1.2.0-SNAPSHOT-library-udf-bin/ext/udf/library-udf.jar to ./ext/udf/.
  • Start IoTDB server and run create function MasterTrain as 'org.apache.iotdb.library.anomaly.UDTFMasterTrain' in client.

Examples

Input series:

+-----------------------------+------------+------------+--------------+--------------+
|                         Time|root.test.lo|root.test.la|root.test.m_la|root.test.m_lo|
+-----------------------------+------------+------------+--------------+--------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.001+08:00| 39.99982556|  116.327274|   116.3271939|   39.99984748|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.002+08:00| 39.99983865|  116.327305|   116.3272269|   39.99984748|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.003+08:00| 40.00019038| 116.3273291|   116.3272634|   39.99984769|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.004+08:00| 39.99982556|  116.327342|   116.3273015|    39.9998483|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.005+08:00| 39.99982991| 116.3273744|    116.327339|   39.99984892|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.006+08:00| 39.99982716| 116.3274117|   116.3273759|   39.99984892|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.007+08:00|  39.9998259| 116.3274396|   116.3274163|   39.99984953|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.008+08:00| 39.99982597| 116.3274668|   116.3274525|   39.99985014|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.009+08:00| 39.99982226| 116.3275026|   116.3274915|   39.99985076|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.010+08:00| 39.99980988| 116.3274967|   116.3275235|   39.99985137|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.011+08:00| 39.99984873| 116.3274929|   116.3275611|   39.99985199|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.012+08:00| 39.99981589| 116.3274745|   116.3275974|    39.9998526|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.013+08:00|  39.9998259| 116.3275095|   116.3276338|   39.99985384|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.014+08:00| 39.99984873| 116.3274787|   116.3276695|   39.99985446|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.015+08:00|  39.9998343| 116.3274693|   116.3277045|   39.99985569|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.016+08:00| 39.99983316| 116.3274941|   116.3277389|   39.99985631|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.017+08:00| 39.99983311| 116.3275401|   116.3277747|   39.99985693|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.018+08:00| 39.99984113| 116.3275713|   116.3278041|   39.99985756|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.019+08:00| 39.99983602| 116.3276003|   116.3278379|   39.99985818|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.020+08:00|  39.9998355| 116.3276308|   116.3278723|    39.9998588|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.021+08:00| 40.00012176| 116.3276107|   116.3279026|   39.99985942|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.022+08:00|  39.9998404| 116.3276684|          null|          null|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.023+08:00| 39.99983942| 116.3277016|          null|          null|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.024+08:00| 39.99984113| 116.3277284|          null|          null|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.025+08:00| 39.99984283| 116.3277562|          null|          null|
+-----------------------------+------------+------------+--------------+--------------+

SQL for query:

select MasterTrain(lo,la,m_lo,m_la,'p'='3','eta'='1.0') from root.test

Output series:

+-----------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|                         Time|MasterTrain(root.test.lo, root.test.la, root.test.m_lo, root.test.m_la, "p"="3", "eta"="1.0")|
+-----------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.001+08:00|                                                                          0.13656607660463288|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.002+08:00|                                                                           0.8291884323013894|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.003+08:00|                                                                          0.05012816073171693|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.004+08:00|                                                                          -0.5495287787485761|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.005+08:00|                                                                          0.03740486307345578|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.006+08:00|                                                                           1.0500132150475212|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.007+08:00|                                                                          0.04583944643116993|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.008+08:00|                                                                         -0.07863708480736269|
+-----------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+

MasterDetect

Usage

This function is used to detect time series and repair errors based on master data. The VAR model is trained by MasterTrain.

Name: MasterDetect

Input Series: Support multiple input series. The types are are in INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

Parameters:

  • p: The order of the model.
  • k: The number of neighbors in master data. It is a positive integer. By default, it will be estimated according to the tuple distance of the k-th nearest neighbor in the master data.
  • eta: The distance threshold. By default, it will be estimated based on the 3-sigma rule.
  • eta: The detection threshold. By default, it will be estimated based on the 3-sigma rule.
  • output_type: The type of output. 'repair' for repairing and 'anomaly' for anomaly detection.
  • output_column: The repaired column to output, defaults to 1 which means output the repair result of the first column.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is the same as the input.

Installation

  • Install IoTDB from branch research/master-detector.
  • Run mvn clean package -am -Dmaven.test.skip=true.
  • Copy ./distribution/target/apache-iotdb-1.2.0-SNAPSHOT-library-udf-bin/apache-iotdb-1.2.0-SNAPSHOT-library-udf-bin/ext/udf/library-udf.jar to ./ext/udf/.
  • Start IoTDB server and run create function MasterDetect as 'org.apache.iotdb.library.anomaly.UDTFMasterDetect' in client.

Examples

Input series:

+-----------------------------+------------+------------+--------------+--------------+--------------------+
|                         Time|root.test.lo|root.test.la|root.test.m_la|root.test.m_lo|     root.test.model|
+-----------------------------+------------+------------+--------------+--------------+--------------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.001+08:00| 39.99982556|  116.327274|   116.3271939|   39.99984748| 0.13656607660463288|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.002+08:00| 39.99983865|  116.327305|   116.3272269|   39.99984748|  0.8291884323013894|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.003+08:00| 40.00019038| 116.3273291|   116.3272634|   39.99984769| 0.05012816073171693|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.004+08:00| 39.99982556|  116.327342|   116.3273015|    39.9998483| -0.5495287787485761|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.005+08:00| 39.99982991| 116.3273744|    116.327339|   39.99984892| 0.03740486307345578|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.006+08:00| 39.99982716| 116.3274117|   116.3273759|   39.99984892|  1.0500132150475212|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.007+08:00|  39.9998259| 116.3274396|   116.3274163|   39.99984953| 0.04583944643116993|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.008+08:00| 39.99982597| 116.3274668|   116.3274525|   39.99985014|-0.07863708480736269|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.009+08:00| 39.99982226| 116.3275026|   116.3274915|   39.99985076|                null|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.010+08:00| 39.99980988| 116.3274967|   116.3275235|   39.99985137|                null|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.011+08:00| 39.99984873| 116.3274929|   116.3275611|   39.99985199|                null|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.012+08:00| 39.99981589| 116.3274745|   116.3275974|    39.9998526|                null|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.013+08:00|  39.9998259| 116.3275095|   116.3276338|   39.99985384|                null|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.014+08:00| 39.99984873| 116.3274787|   116.3276695|   39.99985446|                null|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.015+08:00|  39.9998343| 116.3274693|   116.3277045|   39.99985569|                null|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.016+08:00| 39.99983316| 116.3274941|   116.3277389|   39.99985631|                null|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.017+08:00| 39.99983311| 116.3275401|   116.3277747|   39.99985693|                null|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.018+08:00| 39.99984113| 116.3275713|   116.3278041|   39.99985756|                null|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.019+08:00| 39.99983602| 116.3276003|   116.3278379|   39.99985818|                null|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.020+08:00|  39.9998355| 116.3276308|   116.3278723|    39.9998588|                null|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.021+08:00| 40.00012176| 116.3276107|   116.3279026|   39.99985942|                null|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.022+08:00|  39.9998404| 116.3276684|          null|          null|                null|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.023+08:00| 39.99983942| 116.3277016|          null|          null|                null|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.024+08:00| 39.99984113| 116.3277284|          null|          null|                null|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.025+08:00| 39.99984283| 116.3277562|          null|          null|                null|
+-----------------------------+------------+------------+--------------+--------------+--------------------+
Repairing

SQL for query:

select MasterDetect(lo,la,m_lo,m_la,model,'output_type'='repair','p'='3','k'='3','eta'='1.0') from root.test

Output series:

+-----------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|                         Time|MasterDetect(lo,la,m_lo,m_la,model,'output_type'='repair','p'='3','k'='3','eta'='1.0')|
+-----------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.001+08:00|                                                                            116.327274|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.002+08:00|                                                                            116.327305|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.003+08:00|                                                                           116.3273291|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.004+08:00|                                                                            116.327342|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.005+08:00|                                                                           116.3273744|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.006+08:00|                                                                           116.3274117|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.007+08:00|                                                                           116.3274396|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.008+08:00|                                                                           116.3274668|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.009+08:00|                                                                           116.3275026|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.010+08:00|                                                                           116.3274967|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.011+08:00|                                                                           116.3274929|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.012+08:00|                                                                           116.3274745|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.013+08:00|                                                                           116.3275095|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.014+08:00|                                                                           116.3274787|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.015+08:00|                                                                           116.3274693|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.016+08:00|                                                                           116.3274941|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.017+08:00|                                                                           116.3275401|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.018+08:00|                                                                           116.3275713|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.019+08:00|                                                                           116.3276003|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.020+08:00|                                                                           116.3276308|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.021+08:00|                                                                           116.3276338|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.022+08:00|                                                                           116.3276684|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.023+08:00|                                                                           116.3277016|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.024+08:00|                                                                           116.3277284|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.025+08:00|                                                                           116.3277562|
+-----------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
Anomaly Detection

SQL for query:

select MasterDetect(lo,la,m_lo,m_la,model,'output_type'='anomaly','p'='3','k'='3','eta'='1.0') from root.test

Output series:

+-----------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|                         Time|MasterDetect(lo,la,m_lo,m_la,model,'output_type'='anomaly','p'='3','k'='3','eta'='1.0')|
+-----------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.001+08:00|                                                                                  false|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.002+08:00|                                                                                  false|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.003+08:00|                                                                                  false|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.004+08:00|                                                                                  false|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.005+08:00|                                                                                   true|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.006+08:00|                                                                                   true|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.007+08:00|                                                                                  false|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.008+08:00|                                                                                  false|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.009+08:00|                                                                                  false|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.010+08:00|                                                                                  false|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.011+08:00|                                                                                  false|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.012+08:00|                                                                                  false|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.013+08:00|                                                                                  false|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.014+08:00|                                                                                   true|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.015+08:00|                                                                                  false|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.016+08:00|                                                                                  false|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.017+08:00|                                                                                  false|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.018+08:00|                                                                                  false|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.019+08:00|                                                                                  false|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.020+08:00|                                                                                  false|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.021+08:00|                                                                                  false|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.022+08:00|                                                                                  false|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.023+08:00|                                                                                  false|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.024+08:00|                                                                                  false|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.025+08:00|                                                                                  false|
+-----------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+

Frequency Domain Analysis

Conv

Usage

This function is used to calculate the convolution, i.e. polynomial multiplication.

Name: CONV

Input: Only support two input series. The types are both INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

Output: Output a single series. The type is DOUBLE. It is the result of convolution whose timestamps starting from 0 only indicate the order.

Note: NaN in the input series will be ignored.

Examples

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d2.s1|root.test.d2.s2|
+-----------------------------+---------------+---------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.000+08:00|            1.0|            7.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.001+08:00|            0.0|            2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.002+08:00|            1.0|           null|
+-----------------------------+---------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select conv(s1,s2) from root.test.d2

Output series:

+-----------------------------+--------------------------------------+
|                         Time|conv(root.test.d2.s1, root.test.d2.s2)|
+-----------------------------+--------------------------------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.000+08:00|                                   7.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.001+08:00|                                   2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.002+08:00|                                   7.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.003+08:00|                                   2.0|
+-----------------------------+--------------------------------------+

Deconv

Usage

This function is used to calculate the deconvolution, i.e. polynomial division.

Name: DECONV

Input: Only support two input series. The types are both INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

Parameters:

  • result: The result of deconvolution, which is 'quotient' or 'remainder'. By default, the quotient will be output.

Output: Output a single series. The type is DOUBLE. It is the result of deconvolving the second series from the first series (dividing the first series by the second series) whose timestamps starting from 0 only indicate the order.

Note: NaN in the input series will be ignored.

Examples

Calculate the quotient

When result is 'quotient' or the default, this function calculates the quotient of the deconvolution.

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d2.s3|root.test.d2.s2|
+-----------------------------+---------------+---------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.000+08:00|            8.0|            7.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.001+08:00|            2.0|            2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.002+08:00|            7.0|           null|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.003+08:00|            2.0|           null|
+-----------------------------+---------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select deconv(s3,s2) from root.test.d2

Output series:

+-----------------------------+----------------------------------------+
|                         Time|deconv(root.test.d2.s3, root.test.d2.s2)|
+-----------------------------+----------------------------------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.000+08:00|                                     1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.001+08:00|                                     0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.002+08:00|                                     1.0|
+-----------------------------+----------------------------------------+
Calculate the remainder

When result is 'remainder', this function calculates the remainder of the deconvolution.

Input series is the same as above, the SQL for query is shown below:

select deconv(s3,s2,'result'='remainder') from root.test.d2

Output series:

+-----------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------+
|                         Time|deconv(root.test.d2.s3, root.test.d2.s2, "result"="remainder")|
+-----------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.000+08:00|                                                           1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.001+08:00|                                                           0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.002+08:00|                                                           0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.003+08:00|                                                           0.0|
+-----------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------+

DWT

Usage

This function is used to calculate 1d discrete wavelet transform of a numerical series.

Name: DWT

Input: Only support a single input series. The type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

Parameters:

  • method: The type of wavelet. May select 'Haar', 'DB4', 'DB6', 'DB8', where DB means Daubechies. User may offer coefficients of wavelet transform and ignore this parameter. Case ignored.
  • coef: Coefficients of wavelet transform. When providing this parameter, use comma ',' to split them, and leave no spaces or other punctuations.
  • layer: Times to transform. The number of output vectors equals $layer+1$. Default is 1.

Output: Output a single series. The type is DOUBLE. The length is the same as the input.

Note: The length of input series must be an integer number power of 2.

Examples

Haar wavelet transform

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d1.s1|
+-----------------------------+---------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.000+08:00|            0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.100+08:00|            0.2|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.200+08:00|            1.5|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.300+08:00|            1.2|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.400+08:00|            0.6|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.500+08:00|            1.7|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.600+08:00|            0.8|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.700+08:00|            2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.800+08:00|            2.5|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.900+08:00|            2.1|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.000+08:00|            0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.100+08:00|            2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.200+08:00|            1.8|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.300+08:00|            1.2|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.400+08:00|            1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.500+08:00|            1.6|
+-----------------------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select dwt(s1,"method"="haar") from root.test.d1

Output series:

+-----------------------------+-------------------------------------+
|                         Time|dwt(root.test.d1.s1, "method"="haar")|
+-----------------------------+-------------------------------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.000+08:00|                  0.14142135834465192|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.100+08:00|                    1.909188342921157|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.200+08:00|                   1.6263456473052773|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.300+08:00|                   1.9798989957517026|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.400+08:00|                    3.252691126023161|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.500+08:00|                    1.414213562373095|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.600+08:00|                   2.1213203435596424|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.700+08:00|                   1.8384776479437628|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.800+08:00|                 -0.14142135834465192|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.900+08:00|                  0.21213200063848547|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.000+08:00|                  -0.7778174761639416|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.100+08:00|                  -0.8485281289944873|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.200+08:00|                   0.2828427799095765|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.300+08:00|                   -1.414213562373095|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.400+08:00|                  0.42426400127697095|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.500+08:00|                 -0.42426408557066786|
+-----------------------------+-------------------------------------+

FFT

Usage

This function is used to calculate the fast Fourier transform (FFT) of a numerical series.

Name: FFT

Input: Only support a single input series. The type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

Parameters:

  • method: The type of FFT, which is 'uniform' (by default) or 'nonuniform'. If the value is 'uniform', the timestamps will be ignored and all data points will be regarded as equidistant. Thus, the equidistant fast Fourier transform algorithm will be applied. If the value is 'nonuniform' (TODO), the non-equidistant fast Fourier transform algorithm will be applied based on timestamps.
  • result: The result of FFT, which is 'real', 'imag', 'abs' or 'angle', corresponding to the real part, imaginary part, magnitude and phase angle. By default, the magnitude will be output.
  • compress: The parameter of compression, which is within (0,1]. It is the reserved energy ratio of lossy compression. By default, there is no compression.

Output: Output a single series. The type is DOUBLE. The length is the same as the input. The timestamps starting from 0 only indicate the order.

Note: NaN in the input series will be ignored.

Examples

Uniform FFT

With the default type, uniform FFT is applied.

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d1.s1|
+-----------------------------+---------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.000+08:00|       2.902113|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.000+08:00|      1.1755705|
|1970-01-01T08:00:02.000+08:00|     -2.1755705|
|1970-01-01T08:00:03.000+08:00|     -1.9021131|
|1970-01-01T08:00:04.000+08:00|            1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:05.000+08:00|      1.9021131|
|1970-01-01T08:00:06.000+08:00|      0.1755705|
|1970-01-01T08:00:07.000+08:00|     -1.1755705|
|1970-01-01T08:00:08.000+08:00|      -0.902113|
|1970-01-01T08:00:09.000+08:00|            0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:10.000+08:00|       0.902113|
|1970-01-01T08:00:11.000+08:00|      1.1755705|
|1970-01-01T08:00:12.000+08:00|     -0.1755705|
|1970-01-01T08:00:13.000+08:00|     -1.9021131|
|1970-01-01T08:00:14.000+08:00|           -1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:15.000+08:00|      1.9021131|
|1970-01-01T08:00:16.000+08:00|      2.1755705|
|1970-01-01T08:00:17.000+08:00|     -1.1755705|
|1970-01-01T08:00:18.000+08:00|      -2.902113|
|1970-01-01T08:00:19.000+08:00|            0.0|
+-----------------------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select fft(s1) from root.test.d1

Output series:

+-----------------------------+----------------------+
|                         Time|  fft(root.test.d1.s1)|
+-----------------------------+----------------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.000+08:00|                   0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.001+08:00| 1.2727111142703152E-8|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.002+08:00|  2.385520799101839E-7|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.003+08:00|  8.723291723972645E-8|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.004+08:00|    19.999999960195904|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.005+08:00|     9.999999850988388|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.006+08:00| 3.2260694930700566E-7|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.007+08:00|  8.723291605373329E-8|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.008+08:00|  1.108657103979944E-7|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.009+08:00| 1.2727110997246171E-8|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.010+08:00|1.9852334701272664E-23|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.011+08:00| 1.2727111194499847E-8|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.012+08:00|  1.108657103979944E-7|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.013+08:00|  8.723291785769131E-8|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.014+08:00|  3.226069493070057E-7|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.015+08:00|     9.999999850988388|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.016+08:00|    19.999999960195904|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.017+08:00|  8.723291747109068E-8|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.018+08:00| 2.3855207991018386E-7|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.019+08:00| 1.2727112069910878E-8|
+-----------------------------+----------------------+

Note: The input is $y=sin(2\pi t/4)+2sin(2\pi t/5)$ with a length of 20. Thus, there are peaks in $k=4$ and $k=5$ of the output.

Uniform FFT with Compression

Input series is the same as above, the SQL for query is shown below:

select fft(s1, 'result'='real', 'compress'='0.99'), fft(s1, 'result'='imag','compress'='0.99') from root.test.d1

Output series:

+-----------------------------+----------------------+----------------------+
|                         Time|  fft(root.test.d1.s1,|  fft(root.test.d1.s1,|
|                             |      "result"="real",|      "result"="imag",|
|                             |    "compress"="0.99")|    "compress"="0.99")|
+-----------------------------+----------------------+----------------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.000+08:00|                   0.0|                   0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.001+08:00| -3.932894010461041E-9| 1.2104201863039066E-8|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.002+08:00|-1.4021739447490164E-7| 1.9299268669082926E-7|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.003+08:00| -7.057291240286645E-8|  5.127422242345858E-8|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.004+08:00|    19.021130288047125|    -6.180339875198807|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.005+08:00|     9.999999850988388| 3.501852745067114E-16|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.019+08:00| -3.932894898639461E-9|-1.2104202549376264E-8|
+-----------------------------+----------------------+----------------------+

Note: Based on the conjugation of the Fourier transform result, only the first half of the compression result is reserved.
According to the given parameter, data points are reserved from low frequency to high frequency until the reserved energy ratio exceeds it.
The last data point is reserved to indicate the length of the series.

HighPass

Usage

This function performs low-pass filtering on the input series and extracts components above the cutoff frequency.
The timestamps of input will be ignored and all data points will be regarded as equidistant.

Name: HIGHPASS

Input: Only support a single input series. The type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

Parameters:

  • wpass: The normalized cutoff frequency which values (0,1). This parameter cannot be lacked.

Output: Output a single series. The type is DOUBLE. It is the input after filtering. The length and timestamps of output are the same as the input.

Note: NaN in the input series will be ignored.

Examples

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d1.s1|
+-----------------------------+---------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.000+08:00|       2.902113|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.000+08:00|      1.1755705|
|1970-01-01T08:00:02.000+08:00|     -2.1755705|
|1970-01-01T08:00:03.000+08:00|     -1.9021131|
|1970-01-01T08:00:04.000+08:00|            1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:05.000+08:00|      1.9021131|
|1970-01-01T08:00:06.000+08:00|      0.1755705|
|1970-01-01T08:00:07.000+08:00|     -1.1755705|
|1970-01-01T08:00:08.000+08:00|      -0.902113|
|1970-01-01T08:00:09.000+08:00|            0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:10.000+08:00|       0.902113|
|1970-01-01T08:00:11.000+08:00|      1.1755705|
|1970-01-01T08:00:12.000+08:00|     -0.1755705|
|1970-01-01T08:00:13.000+08:00|     -1.9021131|
|1970-01-01T08:00:14.000+08:00|           -1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:15.000+08:00|      1.9021131|
|1970-01-01T08:00:16.000+08:00|      2.1755705|
|1970-01-01T08:00:17.000+08:00|     -1.1755705|
|1970-01-01T08:00:18.000+08:00|      -2.902113|
|1970-01-01T08:00:19.000+08:00|            0.0|
+-----------------------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select highpass(s1,'wpass'='0.45') from root.test.d1

Output series:

+-----------------------------+-----------------------------------------+
|                         Time|highpass(root.test.d1.s1, "wpass"="0.45")|
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.000+08:00|                       0.9999999534830373|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.000+08:00|                    1.7462829277628608E-8|
|1970-01-01T08:00:02.000+08:00|                      -0.9999999593178128|
|1970-01-01T08:00:03.000+08:00|                   -4.1115269056426626E-8|
|1970-01-01T08:00:04.000+08:00|                       0.9999999925494194|
|1970-01-01T08:00:05.000+08:00|                     3.328126513330016E-8|
|1970-01-01T08:00:06.000+08:00|                      -1.0000000183304454|
|1970-01-01T08:00:07.000+08:00|                    6.260191433311374E-10|
|1970-01-01T08:00:08.000+08:00|                       1.0000000018134796|
|1970-01-01T08:00:09.000+08:00|                   -3.097210911744423E-17|
|1970-01-01T08:00:10.000+08:00|                      -1.0000000018134794|
|1970-01-01T08:00:11.000+08:00|                   -6.260191627862097E-10|
|1970-01-01T08:00:12.000+08:00|                       1.0000000183304454|
|1970-01-01T08:00:13.000+08:00|                    -3.328126501424346E-8|
|1970-01-01T08:00:14.000+08:00|                      -0.9999999925494196|
|1970-01-01T08:00:15.000+08:00|                     4.111526915498874E-8|
|1970-01-01T08:00:16.000+08:00|                       0.9999999593178128|
|1970-01-01T08:00:17.000+08:00|                   -1.7462829341296528E-8|
|1970-01-01T08:00:18.000+08:00|                      -0.9999999534830369|
|1970-01-01T08:00:19.000+08:00|                   -1.035237222742873E-16|
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------------------+

Note: The input is $y=sin(2\pi t/4)+2sin(2\pi t/5)$ with a length of 20. Thus, the output is $y=sin(2\pi t/4)$ after high-pass filtering.

IFFT

Usage

This function treats the two input series as the real and imaginary part of a complex series, performs an inverse fast Fourier transform (IFFT), and outputs the real part of the result.
For the input format, please refer to the output format of FFT function.
Moreover, the compressed output of FFT function is also supported.

Name: IFFT

Input: Only support two input series. The types are both INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

Parameters:

  • start: The start time of the output series with the format 'yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss'. By default, it is '1970-01-01 08:00:00'.
  • interval: The interval of the output series, which is a positive number with an unit. The unit is 'ms' for millisecond, 's' for second, 'm' for minute, 'h' for hour and 'd' for day. By default, it is 1s.

Output: Output a single series. The type is DOUBLE. It is strictly equispaced. The values are the results of IFFT.

Note: If a row contains null points or NaN, it will be ignored.

Examples

Input series:

+-----------------------------+----------------------+----------------------+
|                         Time|       root.test.d1.re|       root.test.d1.im|
+-----------------------------+----------------------+----------------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.000+08:00|                   0.0|                   0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.001+08:00| -3.932894010461041E-9| 1.2104201863039066E-8|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.002+08:00|-1.4021739447490164E-7| 1.9299268669082926E-7|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.003+08:00| -7.057291240286645E-8|  5.127422242345858E-8|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.004+08:00|    19.021130288047125|    -6.180339875198807|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.005+08:00|     9.999999850988388| 3.501852745067114E-16|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.019+08:00| -3.932894898639461E-9|-1.2104202549376264E-8|
+-----------------------------+----------------------+----------------------+

SQL for query:

select ifft(re, im, 'interval'='1m', 'start'='2021-01-01 00:00:00') from root.test.d1

Output series:

+-----------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------+
|                         Time|ifft(root.test.d1.re, root.test.d1.im, "interval"="1m",|
|                             |                         "start"="2021-01-01 00:00:00")|
+-----------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------+
|2021-01-01T00:00:00.000+08:00|                                      2.902112992431231|
|2021-01-01T00:01:00.000+08:00|                                     1.1755704705132448|
|2021-01-01T00:02:00.000+08:00|                                     -2.175570513757101|
|2021-01-01T00:03:00.000+08:00|                                    -1.9021130389094498|
|2021-01-01T00:04:00.000+08:00|                                     0.9999999925494194|
|2021-01-01T00:05:00.000+08:00|                                      1.902113046743454|
|2021-01-01T00:06:00.000+08:00|                                    0.17557053610884188|
|2021-01-01T00:07:00.000+08:00|                                    -1.1755704886020932|
|2021-01-01T00:08:00.000+08:00|                                    -0.9021130371347148|
|2021-01-01T00:09:00.000+08:00|                                  3.552713678800501E-16|
|2021-01-01T00:10:00.000+08:00|                                     0.9021130371347154|
|2021-01-01T00:11:00.000+08:00|                                     1.1755704886020932|
|2021-01-01T00:12:00.000+08:00|                                   -0.17557053610884144|
|2021-01-01T00:13:00.000+08:00|                                     -1.902113046743454|
|2021-01-01T00:14:00.000+08:00|                                    -0.9999999925494196|
|2021-01-01T00:15:00.000+08:00|                                     1.9021130389094498|
|2021-01-01T00:16:00.000+08:00|                                     2.1755705137571004|
|2021-01-01T00:17:00.000+08:00|                                    -1.1755704705132448|
|2021-01-01T00:18:00.000+08:00|                                     -2.902112992431231|
|2021-01-01T00:19:00.000+08:00|                                 -3.552713678800501E-16|
+-----------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------+

LowPass

Usage

This function performs low-pass filtering on the input series and extracts components below the cutoff frequency.
The timestamps of input will be ignored and all data points will be regarded as equidistant.

Name: LOWPASS

Input: Only support a single input series. The type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

Parameters:

  • wpass: The normalized cutoff frequency which values (0,1). This parameter cannot be lacked.

Output: Output a single series. The type is DOUBLE. It is the input after filtering. The length and timestamps of output are the same as the input.

Note: NaN in the input series will be ignored.

Examples

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d1.s1|
+-----------------------------+---------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.000+08:00|       2.902113|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.000+08:00|      1.1755705|
|1970-01-01T08:00:02.000+08:00|     -2.1755705|
|1970-01-01T08:00:03.000+08:00|     -1.9021131|
|1970-01-01T08:00:04.000+08:00|            1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:05.000+08:00|      1.9021131|
|1970-01-01T08:00:06.000+08:00|      0.1755705|
|1970-01-01T08:00:07.000+08:00|     -1.1755705|
|1970-01-01T08:00:08.000+08:00|      -0.902113|
|1970-01-01T08:00:09.000+08:00|            0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:10.000+08:00|       0.902113|
|1970-01-01T08:00:11.000+08:00|      1.1755705|
|1970-01-01T08:00:12.000+08:00|     -0.1755705|
|1970-01-01T08:00:13.000+08:00|     -1.9021131|
|1970-01-01T08:00:14.000+08:00|           -1.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:15.000+08:00|      1.9021131|
|1970-01-01T08:00:16.000+08:00|      2.1755705|
|1970-01-01T08:00:17.000+08:00|     -1.1755705|
|1970-01-01T08:00:18.000+08:00|      -2.902113|
|1970-01-01T08:00:19.000+08:00|            0.0|
+-----------------------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select lowpass(s1,'wpass'='0.45') from root.test.d1

Output series:

+-----------------------------+----------------------------------------+
|                         Time|lowpass(root.test.d1.s1, "wpass"="0.45")|
+-----------------------------+----------------------------------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.000+08:00|                      1.9021130073323922|
|1970-01-01T08:00:01.000+08:00|                      1.1755704705132448|
|1970-01-01T08:00:02.000+08:00|                     -1.1755705286582614|
|1970-01-01T08:00:03.000+08:00|                     -1.9021130389094498|
|1970-01-01T08:00:04.000+08:00|                    7.450580419288145E-9|
|1970-01-01T08:00:05.000+08:00|                       1.902113046743454|
|1970-01-01T08:00:06.000+08:00|                      1.1755705212076808|
|1970-01-01T08:00:07.000+08:00|                     -1.1755704886020932|
|1970-01-01T08:00:08.000+08:00|                     -1.9021130222335536|
|1970-01-01T08:00:09.000+08:00|                   3.552713678800501E-16|
|1970-01-01T08:00:10.000+08:00|                      1.9021130222335536|
|1970-01-01T08:00:11.000+08:00|                      1.1755704886020932|
|1970-01-01T08:00:12.000+08:00|                     -1.1755705212076801|
|1970-01-01T08:00:13.000+08:00|                      -1.902113046743454|
|1970-01-01T08:00:14.000+08:00|                    -7.45058112983088E-9|
|1970-01-01T08:00:15.000+08:00|                      1.9021130389094498|
|1970-01-01T08:00:16.000+08:00|                      1.1755705286582616|
|1970-01-01T08:00:17.000+08:00|                     -1.1755704705132448|
|1970-01-01T08:00:18.000+08:00|                     -1.9021130073323924|
|1970-01-01T08:00:19.000+08:00|                  -2.664535259100376E-16|
+-----------------------------+----------------------------------------+

Note: The input is $y=sin(2\pi t/4)+2sin(2\pi t/5)$ with a length of 20. Thus, the output is $y=2sin(2\pi t/5)$ after low-pass filtering.

Data Matching

Cov

Usage

This function is used to calculate the population covariance.

Name: COV

Input Series: Only support two input series. The types are both INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is DOUBLE. There is only one data point in the series, whose timestamp is 0 and value is the population covariance.

Note:

  • If a row contains missing points, null points or NaN, it will be ignored;
  • If all rows are ignored, NaN will be output.

Examples

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d2.s1|root.test.d2.s2|
+-----------------------------+---------------+---------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|          100.0|          101.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:03.000+08:00|          101.0|           null|
|2020-01-01T00:00:04.000+08:00|          102.0|          101.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:06.000+08:00|          104.0|          102.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:08.000+08:00|          126.0|          102.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:10.000+08:00|          108.0|          103.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:12.000+08:00|           null|          103.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:14.000+08:00|          112.0|          104.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:15.000+08:00|          113.0|           null|
|2020-01-01T00:00:16.000+08:00|          114.0|          104.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:18.000+08:00|          116.0|          105.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:20.000+08:00|          118.0|          105.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:22.000+08:00|          100.0|          106.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:26.000+08:00|          124.0|          108.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:28.000+08:00|          126.0|          108.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:30.000+08:00|            NaN|          108.0|
+-----------------------------+---------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select cov(s1,s2) from root.test.d2

Output series:

+-----------------------------+-------------------------------------+
|                         Time|cov(root.test.d2.s1, root.test.d2.s2)|
+-----------------------------+-------------------------------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.000+08:00|                   12.291666666666666|
+-----------------------------+-------------------------------------+

DTW

Usage

This function is used to calculate the DTW distance between two input series.

Name: DTW

Input Series: Only support two input series. The types are both INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is DOUBLE. There is only one data point in the series, whose timestamp is 0 and value is the DTW distance.

Note:

  • If a row contains missing points, null points or NaN, it will be ignored;
  • If all rows are ignored, 0 will be output.

Examples

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d2.s1|root.test.d2.s2|
+-----------------------------+---------------+---------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.001+08:00|            1.0|            2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.002+08:00|            1.0|            2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.003+08:00|            1.0|            2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.004+08:00|            1.0|            2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.005+08:00|            1.0|            2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.006+08:00|            1.0|            2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.007+08:00|            1.0|            2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.008+08:00|            1.0|            2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.009+08:00|            1.0|            2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.010+08:00|            1.0|            2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.011+08:00|            1.0|            2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.012+08:00|            1.0|            2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.013+08:00|            1.0|            2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.014+08:00|            1.0|            2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.015+08:00|            1.0|            2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.016+08:00|            1.0|            2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.017+08:00|            1.0|            2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.018+08:00|            1.0|            2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.019+08:00|            1.0|            2.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.020+08:00|            1.0|            2.0|
+-----------------------------+---------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select dtw(s1,s2) from root.test.d2

Output series:

+-----------------------------+-------------------------------------+
|                         Time|dtw(root.test.d2.s1, root.test.d2.s2)|
+-----------------------------+-------------------------------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.000+08:00|                                 20.0|
+-----------------------------+-------------------------------------+

Pearson

Usage

This function is used to calculate the Pearson Correlation Coefficient.

Name: PEARSON

Input Series: Only support two input series. The types are both INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is DOUBLE. There is only one data point in the series, whose timestamp is 0 and value is the Pearson Correlation Coefficient.

Note:

  • If a row contains missing points, null points or NaN, it will be ignored;
  • If all rows are ignored, NaN will be output.

Examples

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d2.s1|root.test.d2.s2|
+-----------------------------+---------------+---------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|          100.0|          101.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:03.000+08:00|          101.0|           null|
|2020-01-01T00:00:04.000+08:00|          102.0|          101.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:06.000+08:00|          104.0|          102.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:08.000+08:00|          126.0|          102.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:10.000+08:00|          108.0|          103.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:12.000+08:00|           null|          103.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:14.000+08:00|          112.0|          104.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:15.000+08:00|          113.0|           null|
|2020-01-01T00:00:16.000+08:00|          114.0|          104.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:18.000+08:00|          116.0|          105.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:20.000+08:00|          118.0|          105.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:22.000+08:00|          100.0|          106.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:26.000+08:00|          124.0|          108.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:28.000+08:00|          126.0|          108.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:30.000+08:00|            NaN|          108.0|
+-----------------------------+---------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select pearson(s1,s2) from root.test.d2

Output series:

+-----------------------------+-----------------------------------------+
|                         Time|pearson(root.test.d2.s1, root.test.d2.s2)|
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.000+08:00|                       0.5630881927754872|
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------------------+

PtnSym

Usage

This function is used to find all symmetric subseries in the input whose degree of symmetry is less than the threshold.
The degree of symmetry is calculated by DTW.
The smaller the degree, the more symmetrical the series is.

Name: PATTERNSYMMETRIC

Input Series: Only support a single input series. The type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE

Parameter:

  • window: The length of the symmetric subseries. It's a positive integer and the default value is 10.
  • threshold: The threshold of the degree of symmetry. It's non-negative. Only the subseries whose degree of symmetry is below it will be output. By default, all subseries will be output.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is DOUBLE. Each data point in the output series corresponds to a symmetric subseries. The output timestamp is the starting timestamp of the subseries and the output value is the degree of symmetry.

Example

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d1.s4|
+-----------------------------+---------------+
|2021-01-01T12:00:00.000+08:00|            1.0|
|2021-01-01T12:00:01.000+08:00|            2.0|
|2021-01-01T12:00:02.000+08:00|            3.0|
|2021-01-01T12:00:03.000+08:00|            2.0|
|2021-01-01T12:00:04.000+08:00|            1.0|
|2021-01-01T12:00:05.000+08:00|            1.0|
|2021-01-01T12:00:06.000+08:00|            1.0|
|2021-01-01T12:00:07.000+08:00|            1.0|
|2021-01-01T12:00:08.000+08:00|            2.0|
|2021-01-01T12:00:09.000+08:00|            3.0|
|2021-01-01T12:00:10.000+08:00|            2.0|
|2021-01-01T12:00:11.000+08:00|            1.0|
+-----------------------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select ptnsym(s4, 'window'='5', 'threshold'='0') from root.test.d1

Output series:

+-----------------------------+------------------------------------------------------+
|                         Time|ptnsym(root.test.d1.s4, "window"="5", "threshold"="0")|
+-----------------------------+------------------------------------------------------+
|2021-01-01T12:00:00.000+08:00|                                                   0.0|
|2021-01-01T12:00:07.000+08:00|                                                   0.0|
+-----------------------------+------------------------------------------------------+

XCorr

Usage

This function is used to calculate the cross correlation function of given two time series.
For discrete time series, cross correlation is given by
$$CR(n) = \frac{1}{N} \sum_{m=1}^N S_1[m]S_2[m+n]$$
which represent the similarities between two series with different index shifts.

Name: XCORR

Input Series: Only support two input numeric series. The type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

Output Series: Output a single series with DOUBLE as datatype.
There are $2N-1$ data points in the series, the center of which represents the cross correlation
calculated with pre-aligned series(that is $CR(0)$ in the formula above),
and the previous(or post) values represent those with shifting the latter series forward(or backward otherwise)
until the two series are no longer overlapped(not included).
In short, the values of output series are given by(index starts from 1)
$$OS[i] = CR(-N+i) = \frac{1}{N} \sum_{m=1}^{i} S_1[m]S_2[N-i+m],\ if\ i <= N$$
$$OS[i] = CR(i-N) = \frac{1}{N} \sum_{m=1}^{2N-i} S_1[i-N+m]S_2[m],\ if\ i > N$$

Note:

  • null and NaN values in the input series will be ignored and treated as 0.

Examples

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d1.s1|root.test.d1.s2|
+-----------------------------+---------------+---------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:01.000+08:00|           null|              6|
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|              2|              7|
|2020-01-01T00:00:03.000+08:00|              3|            NaN|
|2020-01-01T00:00:04.000+08:00|              4|              9|
|2020-01-01T00:00:05.000+08:00|              5|             10|
+-----------------------------+---------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select xcorr(s1, s2) from root.test.d1 where time <= 2020-01-01 00:00:05

Output series:

+-----------------------------+---------------------------------------+
|                         Time|xcorr(root.test.d1.s1, root.test.d1.s2)|
+-----------------------------+---------------------------------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.001+08:00|                                    0.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.002+08:00|                                    4.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.003+08:00|                                    9.6|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.004+08:00|                                   13.4|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.005+08:00|                                   20.0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.006+08:00|                                   15.6|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.007+08:00|                                    9.2|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.008+08:00|                                   11.8|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.009+08:00|                                    6.0|
+-----------------------------+---------------------------------------+

Data Repairing

TimestampRepair

This function is used for timestamp repair.
According to the given standard time interval,
the method of minimizing the repair cost is adopted.
By fine-tuning the timestamps,
the original data with unstable timestamp interval is repaired to strictly equispaced data.
If no standard time interval is given,
this function will use the median, mode or cluster of the time interval to estimate the standard time interval.

Name: TIMESTAMPREPAIR

Input Series: Only support a single input series. The data type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

Parameters:

  • interval: The standard time interval whose unit is millisecond. It is a positive integer. By default, it will be estimated according to the given method.
  • method: The method to estimate the standard time interval, which is 'median', 'mode' or 'cluster'. This parameter is only valid when interval is not given. By default, median will be used.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is the same as the input. This series is the input after repairing.

Examples

Manually Specify the Standard Time Interval

When interval is given, this function repairs according to the given standard time interval.

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d2.s1|
+-----------------------------+---------------+
|2021-07-01T12:00:00.000+08:00|            1.0|
|2021-07-01T12:00:10.000+08:00|            2.0|
|2021-07-01T12:00:19.000+08:00|            3.0|
|2021-07-01T12:00:30.000+08:00|            4.0|
|2021-07-01T12:00:40.000+08:00|            5.0|
|2021-07-01T12:00:50.000+08:00|            6.0|
|2021-07-01T12:01:01.000+08:00|            7.0|
|2021-07-01T12:01:11.000+08:00|            8.0|
|2021-07-01T12:01:21.000+08:00|            9.0|
|2021-07-01T12:01:31.000+08:00|           10.0|
+-----------------------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select timestamprepair(s1,'interval'='10000') from root.test.d2

Output series:

+-----------------------------+----------------------------------------------------+
|                         Time|timestamprepair(root.test.d2.s1, "interval"="10000")|
+-----------------------------+----------------------------------------------------+
|2021-07-01T12:00:00.000+08:00|                                                 1.0|
|2021-07-01T12:00:10.000+08:00|                                                 2.0|
|2021-07-01T12:00:20.000+08:00|                                                 3.0|
|2021-07-01T12:00:30.000+08:00|                                                 4.0|
|2021-07-01T12:00:40.000+08:00|                                                 5.0|
|2021-07-01T12:00:50.000+08:00|                                                 6.0|
|2021-07-01T12:01:00.000+08:00|                                                 7.0|
|2021-07-01T12:01:10.000+08:00|                                                 8.0|
|2021-07-01T12:01:20.000+08:00|                                                 9.0|
|2021-07-01T12:01:30.000+08:00|                                                10.0|
+-----------------------------+----------------------------------------------------+
Automatically Estimate the Standard Time Interval

When interval is default, this function estimates the standard time interval.

Input series is the same as above, the SQL for query is shown below:

select timestamprepair(s1) from root.test.d2

Output series:

+-----------------------------+--------------------------------+
|                         Time|timestamprepair(root.test.d2.s1)|
+-----------------------------+--------------------------------+
|2021-07-01T12:00:00.000+08:00|                             1.0|
|2021-07-01T12:00:10.000+08:00|                             2.0|
|2021-07-01T12:00:20.000+08:00|                             3.0|
|2021-07-01T12:00:30.000+08:00|                             4.0|
|2021-07-01T12:00:40.000+08:00|                             5.0|
|2021-07-01T12:00:50.000+08:00|                             6.0|
|2021-07-01T12:01:00.000+08:00|                             7.0|
|2021-07-01T12:01:10.000+08:00|                             8.0|
|2021-07-01T12:01:20.000+08:00|                             9.0|
|2021-07-01T12:01:30.000+08:00|                            10.0|
+-----------------------------+--------------------------------+

ValueFill

Usage

This function is used to impute time series. Several methods are supported.

Name: ValueFill
Input Series: Only support a single input series. The type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

Parameters:

  • method: {"mean", "previous", "linear", "likelihood", "AR", "MA", "SCREEN"}, default "linear".
    Method to use for imputation in series. "mean": use global mean value to fill holes; "previous": propagate last valid observation forward to next valid. "linear": simplest interpolation method; "likelihood":Maximum likelihood estimation based on the normal distribution of speed; "AR": auto regression; "MA": moving average; "SCREEN": speed constraint.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is the same as the input. This series is the input after repairing.

Note: AR method use AR(1) model. Input value should be auto-correlated, or the function would output a single point (0, 0.0).

Examples

Fill with linear

When method is "linear" or the default, Screen method is used to impute.

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d2.s1|
+-----------------------------+---------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|            NaN|
|2020-01-01T00:00:03.000+08:00|          101.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:04.000+08:00|          102.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:06.000+08:00|          104.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:08.000+08:00|          126.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:10.000+08:00|          108.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:14.000+08:00|            NaN|
|2020-01-01T00:00:15.000+08:00|          113.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:16.000+08:00|          114.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:18.000+08:00|          116.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:20.000+08:00|            NaN|
|2020-01-01T00:00:22.000+08:00|            NaN|
|2020-01-01T00:00:26.000+08:00|          124.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:28.000+08:00|          126.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:30.000+08:00|          128.0|
+-----------------------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select valuefill(s1) from root.test.d2

Output series:

+-----------------------------+-----------------------+
|                         Time|valuefill(root.test.d2)|
+-----------------------------+-----------------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|                    NaN|
|2020-01-01T00:00:03.000+08:00|                  101.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:04.000+08:00|                  102.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:06.000+08:00|                  104.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:08.000+08:00|                  126.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:10.000+08:00|                  108.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:14.000+08:00|                  108.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:15.000+08:00|                  113.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:16.000+08:00|                  114.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:18.000+08:00|                  116.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:20.000+08:00|                  118.7|
|2020-01-01T00:00:22.000+08:00|                  121.3|
|2020-01-01T00:00:26.000+08:00|                  124.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:28.000+08:00|                  126.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:30.000+08:00|                  128.0|
+-----------------------------+-----------------------+
Previous Fill

When method is "previous", previous method is used.

Input series is the same as above, the SQL for query is shown below:

select valuefill(s1,"method"="previous") from root.test.d2

Output series:

+-----------------------------+-------------------------------------------+
|                         Time|valuefill(root.test.d2,"method"="previous")|
+-----------------------------+-------------------------------------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|                                        NaN|
|2020-01-01T00:00:03.000+08:00|                                      101.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:04.000+08:00|                                      102.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:06.000+08:00|                                      104.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:08.000+08:00|                                      126.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:10.000+08:00|                                      108.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:14.000+08:00|                                      110.5|
|2020-01-01T00:00:15.000+08:00|                                      113.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:16.000+08:00|                                      114.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:18.000+08:00|                                      116.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:20.000+08:00|                                      116.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:22.000+08:00|                                      116.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:26.000+08:00|                                      124.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:28.000+08:00|                                      126.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:30.000+08:00|                                      128.0|
+-----------------------------+-------------------------------------------+

ValueRepair

Usage

This function is used to repair the value of the time series.
Currently, two methods are supported:
Screen is a method based on speed threshold, which makes all speeds meet the threshold requirements under the premise of minimum changes;
LsGreedy is a method based on speed change likelihood, which models speed changes as Gaussian distribution, and uses a greedy algorithm to maximize the likelihood.

Name: VALUEREPAIR

Input Series: Only support a single input series. The type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

Parameters:

  • method: The method used to repair, which is 'Screen' or 'LsGreedy'. By default, Screen is used.
  • minSpeed: This parameter is only valid with Screen. It is the speed threshold. Speeds below it will be regarded as outliers. By default, it is the median minus 3 times of median absolute deviation.
  • maxSpeed: This parameter is only valid with Screen. It is the speed threshold. Speeds above it will be regarded as outliers. By default, it is the median plus 3 times of median absolute deviation.
  • center: This parameter is only valid with LsGreedy. It is the center of the Gaussian distribution of speed changes. By default, it is 0.
  • sigma: This parameter is only valid with LsGreedy. It is the standard deviation of the Gaussian distribution of speed changes. By default, it is the median absolute deviation.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is the same as the input. This series is the input after repairing.

Note: NaN will be filled with linear interpolation before repairing.

Examples

Repair with Screen

When method is 'Screen' or the default, Screen method is used.

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d2.s1|
+-----------------------------+---------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|          100.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:03.000+08:00|          101.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:04.000+08:00|          102.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:06.000+08:00|          104.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:08.000+08:00|          126.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:10.000+08:00|          108.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:14.000+08:00|          112.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:15.000+08:00|          113.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:16.000+08:00|          114.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:18.000+08:00|          116.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:20.000+08:00|          118.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:22.000+08:00|          100.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:26.000+08:00|          124.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:28.000+08:00|          126.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:30.000+08:00|            NaN|
+-----------------------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select valuerepair(s1) from root.test.d2

Output series:

+-----------------------------+----------------------------+
|                         Time|valuerepair(root.test.d2.s1)|
+-----------------------------+----------------------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|                       100.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:03.000+08:00|                       101.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:04.000+08:00|                       102.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:06.000+08:00|                       104.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:08.000+08:00|                       106.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:10.000+08:00|                       108.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:14.000+08:00|                       112.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:15.000+08:00|                       113.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:16.000+08:00|                       114.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:18.000+08:00|                       116.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:20.000+08:00|                       118.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:22.000+08:00|                       120.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:26.000+08:00|                       124.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:28.000+08:00|                       126.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:30.000+08:00|                       128.0|
+-----------------------------+----------------------------+
Repair with LsGreedy

When method is 'LsGreedy', LsGreedy method is used.

Input series is the same as above, the SQL for query is shown below:

select valuerepair(s1,'method'='LsGreedy') from root.test.d2

Output series:

+-----------------------------+-------------------------------------------------+
|                         Time|valuerepair(root.test.d2.s1, "method"="LsGreedy")|
+-----------------------------+-------------------------------------------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|                                            100.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:03.000+08:00|                                            101.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:04.000+08:00|                                            102.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:06.000+08:00|                                            104.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:08.000+08:00|                                            106.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:10.000+08:00|                                            108.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:14.000+08:00|                                            112.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:15.000+08:00|                                            113.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:16.000+08:00|                                            114.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:18.000+08:00|                                            116.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:20.000+08:00|                                            118.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:22.000+08:00|                                            120.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:26.000+08:00|                                            124.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:28.000+08:00|                                            126.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:30.000+08:00|                                            128.0|
+-----------------------------+-------------------------------------------------+

MasterRepair

Usage

This function is used to clean time series with master data.

Name: MasterRepair
Input Series: Support multiple input series. The types are are in INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

Parameters:

  • omega: The window size. It is a non-negative integer whose unit is millisecond. By default, it will be estimated according to the distances of two tuples with various time differences.
  • eta: The distance threshold. It is a positive number. By default, it will be estimated according to the distance distribution of tuples in windows.
  • k: The number of neighbors in master data. It is a positive integer. By default, it will be estimated according to the tuple dis- tance of the k-th nearest neighbor in the master data.
  • output_column: The repaired column to output, defaults to 1 which means output the repair result of the first column.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is the same as the input. This series is the input after repairing.

Examples

Input series:

+-----------------------------+------------+------------+------------+------------+------------+------------+
|                         Time|root.test.t1|root.test.t2|root.test.t3|root.test.m1|root.test.m2|root.test.m3|
+-----------------------------+------------+------------+------------+------------+------------+------------+
|2021-07-01T12:00:01.000+08:00|        1704|     1154.55|       0.195|        1704|     1154.55|       0.195|
|2021-07-01T12:00:02.000+08:00|        1702|     1152.30|       0.193|        1702|     1152.30|       0.193|
|2021-07-01T12:00:03.000+08:00|        1702|     1148.65|       0.192|        1702|     1148.65|       0.192|
|2021-07-01T12:00:04.000+08:00|        1701|     1145.20|       0.194|        1701|     1145.20|       0.194|
|2021-07-01T12:00:07.000+08:00|        1703|     1150.55|       0.195|        1703|     1150.55|       0.195|
|2021-07-01T12:00:08.000+08:00|        1694|     1151.55|       0.193|        1704|     1151.55|       0.193|
|2021-07-01T12:01:09.000+08:00|        1705|     1153.55|       0.194|        1705|     1153.55|       0.194|
|2021-07-01T12:01:10.000+08:00|        1706|     1152.30|       0.190|        1706|     1152.30|       0.190|
+-----------------------------+------------+------------+------------+------------+------------+------------+

SQL for query:

select MasterRepair(t1,t2,t3,m1,m2,m3) from root.test

Output series:

+-----------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|                         Time|MasterRepair(root.test.t1,root.test.t2,root.test.t3,root.test.m1,root.test.m2,root.test.m3)|
+-----------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|2021-07-01T12:00:01.000+08:00|                                                                                       1704|
|2021-07-01T12:00:02.000+08:00|                                                                                       1702|
|2021-07-01T12:00:03.000+08:00|                                                                                       1702|
|2021-07-01T12:00:04.000+08:00|                                                                                       1701|
|2021-07-01T12:00:07.000+08:00|                                                                                       1703|
|2021-07-01T12:00:08.000+08:00|                                                                                       1704|
|2021-07-01T12:01:09.000+08:00|                                                                                       1705|
|2021-07-01T12:01:10.000+08:00|                                                                                       1706|
+-----------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+

SeasonalRepair

Usage

This function is used to repair the value of the seasonal time series via decomposition. Currently, two methods are supported: Classical - detect irregular fluctuations through residual component decomposed by classical decomposition, and repair them through moving average; Improved - detect irregular fluctuations through residual component decomposed by improved decomposition, and repair them through moving median.

Name: SEASONALREPAIR

Input Series: Only support a single input series. The data type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

Parameters:

  • method: The decomposition method used to repair, which is 'Classical' or 'Improved'. By default, classical decomposition is used.
  • period: It is the period of the time series.
  • k: It is the range threshold of residual term, which limits the degree to which the residual term is off-center. By default, it is 9.
  • max_iter: It is the maximum number of iterations for the algorithm. By default, it is 10.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is the same as the input. This series is the input after repairing.

Note: NaN will be filled with linear interpolation before repairing.

Examples

Repair with Classical

When method is 'Classical' or default value, classical decomposition method is used.

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d2.s1|
+-----------------------------+---------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|          100.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:04.000+08:00|          120.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:06.000+08:00|           80.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:08.000+08:00|          100.5|
|2020-01-01T00:00:10.000+08:00|          119.5|
|2020-01-01T00:00:12.000+08:00|          101.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:14.000+08:00|           99.5|
|2020-01-01T00:00:16.000+08:00|          119.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:18.000+08:00|           80.5|
|2020-01-01T00:00:20.000+08:00|           99.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:22.000+08:00|          121.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:24.000+08:00|           79.5|
+-----------------------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select seasonalrepair(s1,'period'=3,'k'=2) from root.test.d2

Output series:

+-----------------------------+--------------------------------------------------+
|                         Time|seasonalrepair(root.test.d2.s1, 'period'=4, 'k'=2)|
+-----------------------------+--------------------------------------------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|                                             100.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:04.000+08:00|                                             120.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:06.000+08:00|                                              80.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:08.000+08:00|                                             100.5|
|2020-01-01T00:00:10.000+08:00|                                             119.5|
|2020-01-01T00:00:12.000+08:00|                                              87.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:14.000+08:00|                                              99.5|
|2020-01-01T00:00:16.000+08:00|                                             119.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:18.000+08:00|                                              80.5|
|2020-01-01T00:00:20.000+08:00|                                              99.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:22.000+08:00|                                             121.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:24.000+08:00|                                              79.5|
+-----------------------------+--------------------------------------------------+
Repair with Improved

When method is 'Improved', improved decomposition method is used.

Input series is the same as above, the SQL for query is shown below:

select seasonalrepair(s1,'method'='improved','period'=3) from root.test.d2

Output series:

+-----------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
|                         Time|valuerepair(root.test.d2.s1, 'method'='improved', 'period'=3)|
+-----------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|                                                        100.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:04.000+08:00|                                                        120.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:06.000+08:00|                                                         80.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:08.000+08:00|                                                        100.5|
|2020-01-01T00:00:10.000+08:00|                                                        119.5|
|2020-01-01T00:00:12.000+08:00|                                                         81.5|
|2020-01-01T00:00:14.000+08:00|                                                         99.5|
|2020-01-01T00:00:16.000+08:00|                                                        119.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:18.000+08:00|                                                         80.5|
|2020-01-01T00:00:20.000+08:00|                                                         99.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:22.000+08:00|                                                        121.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:24.000+08:00|                                                         79.5|
+-----------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+

Series Discovery

ConsecutiveSequences

Usage

This function is used to find locally longest consecutive subsequences in strictly equispaced multidimensional data.

Strictly equispaced data is the data whose time intervals are strictly equal. Missing data, including missing rows and missing values, is allowed in it, while data redundancy and timestamp drift is not allowed.

Consecutive subsequence is the subsequence that is strictly equispaced with the standard time interval without any missing data. If a consecutive subsequence is not a proper subsequence of any consecutive subsequence, it is locally longest.

Name: CONSECUTIVESEQUENCES

Input Series: Support multiple input series. The type is arbitrary but the data is strictly equispaced.

Parameters:

  • gap: The standard time interval which is a positive number with an unit. The unit is 'ms' for millisecond, 's' for second, 'm' for minute, 'h' for hour and 'd' for day. By default, it will be estimated by the mode of time intervals.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is INT32. Each data point in the output series corresponds to a locally longest consecutive subsequence. The output timestamp is the starting timestamp of the subsequence and the output value is the number of data points in the subsequence.

Note: For input series that is not strictly equispaced, there is no guarantee on the output.

Examples

Manually Specify the Standard Time Interval

It's able to manually specify the standard time interval by the parameter gap. It's notable that false parameter leads to false output.

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d1.s1|root.test.d1.s2|
+-----------------------------+---------------+---------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:00.000+08:00|            1.0|            1.0|
|2020-01-01T00:05:00.000+08:00|            1.0|            1.0|
|2020-01-01T00:10:00.000+08:00|            1.0|            1.0|
|2020-01-01T00:20:00.000+08:00|            1.0|            1.0|
|2020-01-01T00:25:00.000+08:00|            1.0|            1.0|
|2020-01-01T00:30:00.000+08:00|            1.0|            1.0|
|2020-01-01T00:35:00.000+08:00|            1.0|            1.0|
|2020-01-01T00:40:00.000+08:00|            1.0|           null|
|2020-01-01T00:45:00.000+08:00|            1.0|            1.0|
|2020-01-01T00:50:00.000+08:00|            1.0|            1.0|
+-----------------------------+---------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select consecutivesequences(s1,s2,'gap'='5m') from root.test.d1

Output series:

+-----------------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------+
|                         Time|consecutivesequences(root.test.d1.s1, root.test.d1.s2, "gap"="5m")|
+-----------------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:00.000+08:00|                                                                 3|
|2020-01-01T00:20:00.000+08:00|                                                                 4|
|2020-01-01T00:45:00.000+08:00|                                                                 2|
+-----------------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------+
Automatically Estimate the Standard Time Interval

When gap is default, this function estimates the standard time interval by the mode of time intervals and gets the same results. Therefore, this usage is more recommended.

Input series is the same as above, the SQL for query is shown below:

select consecutivesequences(s1,s2) from root.test.d1

Output series:

+-----------------------------+------------------------------------------------------+
|                         Time|consecutivesequences(root.test.d1.s1, root.test.d1.s2)|
+-----------------------------+------------------------------------------------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:00.000+08:00|                                                     3|
|2020-01-01T00:20:00.000+08:00|                                                     4|
|2020-01-01T00:45:00.000+08:00|                                                     2|
+-----------------------------+------------------------------------------------------+

ConsecutiveWindows

Usage

This function is used to find consecutive windows of specified length in strictly equispaced multidimensional data.

Strictly equispaced data is the data whose time intervals are strictly equal. Missing data, including missing rows and missing values, is allowed in it, while data redundancy and timestamp drift is not allowed.

Consecutive window is the subsequence that is strictly equispaced with the standard time interval without any missing data.

Name: CONSECUTIVEWINDOWS

Input Series: Support multiple input series. The type is arbitrary but the data is strictly equispaced.

Parameters:

  • gap: The standard time interval which is a positive number with an unit. The unit is 'ms' for millisecond, 's' for second, 'm' for minute, 'h' for hour and 'd' for day. By default, it will be estimated by the mode of time intervals.
  • length: The length of the window which is a positive number with an unit. The unit is 'ms' for millisecond, 's' for second, 'm' for minute, 'h' for hour and 'd' for day. This parameter cannot be lacked.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is INT32. Each data point in the output series corresponds to a consecutive window. The output timestamp is the starting timestamp of the window and the output value is the number of data points in the window.

Note: For input series that is not strictly equispaced, there is no guarantee on the output.

Examples

Input series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d1.s1|root.test.d1.s2|
+-----------------------------+---------------+---------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:00.000+08:00|            1.0|            1.0|
|2020-01-01T00:05:00.000+08:00|            1.0|            1.0|
|2020-01-01T00:10:00.000+08:00|            1.0|            1.0|
|2020-01-01T00:20:00.000+08:00|            1.0|            1.0|
|2020-01-01T00:25:00.000+08:00|            1.0|            1.0|
|2020-01-01T00:30:00.000+08:00|            1.0|            1.0|
|2020-01-01T00:35:00.000+08:00|            1.0|            1.0|
|2020-01-01T00:40:00.000+08:00|            1.0|           null|
|2020-01-01T00:45:00.000+08:00|            1.0|            1.0|
|2020-01-01T00:50:00.000+08:00|            1.0|            1.0|
+-----------------------------+---------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select consecutivewindows(s1,s2,'length'='10m') from root.test.d1

Output series:

+-----------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------------+
|                         Time|consecutivewindows(root.test.d1.s1, root.test.d1.s2, "length"="10m")|
+-----------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:00.000+08:00|                                                                   3|
|2020-01-01T00:20:00.000+08:00|                                                                   3|
|2020-01-01T00:25:00.000+08:00|                                                                   3|
+-----------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------------+

Machine Learning

AR

Usage

This function is used to learn the coefficients of the autoregressive models for a time series.

Name: AR

Input Series: Only support a single input numeric series. The type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

Parameters:

  • p: The order of the autoregressive model. Its default value is 1.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is DOUBLE. The first line corresponds to the first order coefficient, and so on.

Note:

  • Parameter p should be a positive integer.
  • Most points in the series should be sampled at a constant time interval.
  • Linear interpolation is applied for the missing points in the series.

Examples

Assigning Model Order

Input Series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d0.s0|
+-----------------------------+---------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:01.000+08:00|           -4.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|           -3.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:03.000+08:00|           -2.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:04.000+08:00|           -1.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:05.000+08:00|            0.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:06.000+08:00|            1.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:07.000+08:00|            2.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:08.000+08:00|            3.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:09.000+08:00|            4.0|
+-----------------------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select ar(s0,"p"="2") from root.test.d0

Output Series:

+-----------------------------+---------------------------+
|                         Time|ar(root.test.d0.s0,"p"="2")|
+-----------------------------+---------------------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.001+08:00|                     0.9429|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.002+08:00|                    -0.2571|
+-----------------------------+---------------------------+

Representation

Usage

This function is used to represent a time series.

Name: Representation

Input Series: Only support a single input numeric series. The type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

Parameters:

  • tb: The number of timestamp blocks. Its default value is 10.
  • vb: The number of value blocks. Its default value is 10.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is INT32. The length is tb*vb. The timestamps starting from 0 only indicate the order.

Note:

  • Parameters tb and vb should be positive integers.

Examples

Assigning Window Size and Dimension

Input Series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d0.s0|
+-----------------------------+---------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:01.000+08:00|           -4.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|           -3.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:03.000+08:00|           -2.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:04.000+08:00|           -1.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:05.000+08:00|            0.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:06.000+08:00|            1.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:07.000+08:00|            2.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:08.000+08:00|            3.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:09.000+08:00|            4.0|
+-----------------------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select representation(s0,"tb"="3","vb"="2") from root.test.d0

Output Series:

+-----------------------------+-------------------------------------------------+
|                         Time|representation(root.test.d0.s0,"tb"="3","vb"="2")|
+-----------------------------+-------------------------------------------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.001+08:00|                                                1|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.002+08:00|                                                1|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.003+08:00|                                                0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.004+08:00|                                                0|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.005+08:00|                                                1|
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.006+08:00|                                                1|
+-----------------------------+-------------------------------------------------+

RM

Usage

This function is used to calculate the matching score of two time series according to the representation.

Name: RM

Input Series: Only support two input numeric series. The type is INT32 / INT64 / FLOAT / DOUBLE.

Parameters:

  • tb: The number of timestamp blocks. Its default value is 10.
  • vb: The number of value blocks. Its default value is 10.

Output Series: Output a single series. The type is DOUBLE. There is only one data point in the series, whose timestamp is 0 and value is the matching score.

Note:

  • Parameters tb and vb should be positive integers.

Examples

Assigning Window Size and Dimension

Input Series:

+-----------------------------+---------------+---------------+
|                         Time|root.test.d0.s0|root.test.d0.s1
+-----------------------------+---------------+---------------+
|2020-01-01T00:00:01.000+08:00|           -4.0|           -4.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:02.000+08:00|           -3.0|           -3.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:03.000+08:00|           -3.0|           -3.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:04.000+08:00|           -1.0|           -1.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:05.000+08:00|            0.0|            0.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:06.000+08:00|            1.0|            1.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:07.000+08:00|            2.0|            2.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:08.000+08:00|            3.0|            3.0|
|2020-01-01T00:00:09.000+08:00|            4.0|            4.0|
+-----------------------------+---------------+---------------+

SQL for query:

select rm(s0, s1,"tb"="3","vb"="2") from root.test.d0

Output Series:

+-----------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+
|                         Time|rm(root.test.d0.s0,root.test.d0.s1,"tb"="3","vb"="2")|
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+
|1970-01-01T08:00:00.001+08:00|                                                 1.00|
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------+

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