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5 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
György Krajcsovits
db46de3dcb
feat(api): add histogram_format=native to query endpoints
Add a new optional histogram_format query parameter to /api/v1/query
and /api/v1/query_range. When set to native, native histograms in the
JSON response are emitted in a schema-aware shape.

For exponential schemas:

  {
    "count":          "<count>",
    "sum":            "<sum>",
    "schema":         <int>,
    "zero_threshold": "<threshold>",
    "zero_count":     "<count>",                       // when non-zero
    "negative_buckets": [ [ <index>, "<count>" ], ... ], // when non-empty
    "buckets":          [ [ <index>, "<count>" ], ... ]  // when non-empty
  }

zero_threshold is always emitted because, together with schema, it
fully describes the bucket layout. The negative/positive bucket
arrays carry the schema-defined bucket index and count, so empty
buckets that fall between non-empty ones are not transmitted.

For custom-bucket histograms (schema -53):

  {
    "count":      "<count>",
    "sum":        "<sum>",
    "schema":     -53,
    "boundaries": [ "<upper_bound>", ... ],
    "buckets":    [ [ <index>, "<count>" ], ... ]
  }

boundaries lists the bucket upper bounds; each bucket entry's index
is the 0-based index into boundaries.

This lets clients that already understand the schema (e.g. Grafana
rendering NHCB heatmaps) reconstruct every bucket including empty
custom-bucket slots, and is also substantially more compact than the
boundary-based representation for histograms with many buckets.

The existing boundary-based representation is unchanged when
histogram_format is absent or set to any other value.

Signed-off-by: György Krajcsovits <gyorgy.krajcsovits@grafana.com>
2026-05-22 19:13:40 +02:00
Ben Kochie
e14795bbf4
Remove copyright date from headers (#17785)
Remove copyright dates from various files as part of [PROM-50].

[PROM-50]: https://github.com/prometheus/proposals/blob/main/proposals/0050-remove-copyright-dates.md

Signed-off-by: SuperQ <superq@gmail.com>
2026-01-05 13:46:21 +01:00
beorn7
817a2396cb Name float values as "floats", not as "values"
In the past, every sample value was a float, so it was fine to call a
variable holding such a float "value" or "sample". With native
histograms, a sample might have a histogram value. And a histogram
value is still a value. Calling a float value just "value" or "sample"
or "V" is therefore misleading. Over the last few commits, I already
renamed many variables, but this cleans up a few more places where the
changes are more invasive.

Note that we do not to attempt naming in the JSON APIs or in the
protobufs. That would be quite a disruption. However, internally, we
can call variables as we want, and we should go with the option of
avoiding misunderstandings.

Signed-off-by: beorn7 <beorn@grafana.com>
2023-04-13 19:25:24 +02:00
beorn7
c0879d64cf promql: Separate Point into FPoint and HPoint
In other words: Instead of having a “polymorphous” `Point` that can
either contain a float value or a histogram value, use an `FPoint` for
floats and an `HPoint` for histograms.

This seemingly small change has a _lot_ of repercussions throughout
the codebase.

The idea here is to avoid the increase in size of `Point` arrays that
happened after native histograms had been added.

The higher-level data structures (`Sample`, `Series`, etc.) are still
“polymorphous”. The same idea could be applied to them, but at each
step the trade-offs needed to be evaluated.

The idea with this change is to do the minimum necessary to get back
to pre-histogram performance for functions that do not touch
histograms. Here are comparisons for the `changes` function. The test
data doesn't include histograms yet. Ideally, there would be no change
in the benchmark result at all.

First runtime v2.39 compared to directly prior to this commit:

```
name                                                  old time/op    new time/op    delta
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_one[1d]),steps=1-16            391µs ± 2%     542µs ± 1%  +38.58%  (p=0.000 n=9+8)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_one[1d]),steps=10-16           452µs ± 2%     617µs ± 2%  +36.48%  (p=0.000 n=10+10)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_one[1d]),steps=100-16         1.12ms ± 1%    1.36ms ± 2%  +21.58%  (p=0.000 n=8+10)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_one[1d]),steps=1000-16        7.83ms ± 1%    8.94ms ± 1%  +14.21%  (p=0.000 n=10+10)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_ten[1d]),steps=1-16           2.98ms ± 0%    3.30ms ± 1%  +10.67%  (p=0.000 n=9+10)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_ten[1d]),steps=10-16          3.66ms ± 1%    4.10ms ± 1%  +11.82%  (p=0.000 n=10+10)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_ten[1d]),steps=100-16         10.5ms ± 0%    11.8ms ± 1%  +12.50%  (p=0.000 n=8+10)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_ten[1d]),steps=1000-16        77.6ms ± 1%    87.4ms ± 1%  +12.63%  (p=0.000 n=9+9)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_hundred[1d]),steps=1-16       30.4ms ± 2%    32.8ms ± 1%   +8.01%  (p=0.000 n=10+10)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_hundred[1d]),steps=10-16      37.1ms ± 2%    40.6ms ± 2%   +9.64%  (p=0.000 n=10+10)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_hundred[1d]),steps=100-16      105ms ± 1%     117ms ± 1%  +11.69%  (p=0.000 n=10+10)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_hundred[1d]),steps=1000-16     783ms ± 3%     876ms ± 1%  +11.83%  (p=0.000 n=9+10)
```

And then runtime v2.39 compared to after this commit:

```
name                                                  old time/op    new time/op    delta
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_one[1d]),steps=1-16            391µs ± 2%     547µs ± 1%  +39.84%  (p=0.000 n=9+8)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_one[1d]),steps=10-16           452µs ± 2%     616µs ± 2%  +36.15%  (p=0.000 n=10+10)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_one[1d]),steps=100-16         1.12ms ± 1%    1.26ms ± 1%  +12.20%  (p=0.000 n=8+10)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_one[1d]),steps=1000-16        7.83ms ± 1%    7.95ms ± 1%   +1.59%  (p=0.000 n=10+8)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_ten[1d]),steps=1-16           2.98ms ± 0%    3.38ms ± 2%  +13.49%  (p=0.000 n=9+10)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_ten[1d]),steps=10-16          3.66ms ± 1%    4.02ms ± 1%   +9.80%  (p=0.000 n=10+9)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_ten[1d]),steps=100-16         10.5ms ± 0%    10.8ms ± 1%   +3.08%  (p=0.000 n=8+10)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_ten[1d]),steps=1000-16        77.6ms ± 1%    78.1ms ± 1%   +0.58%  (p=0.035 n=9+10)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_hundred[1d]),steps=1-16       30.4ms ± 2%    33.5ms ± 4%  +10.18%  (p=0.000 n=10+10)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_hundred[1d]),steps=10-16      37.1ms ± 2%    40.0ms ± 1%   +7.98%  (p=0.000 n=10+10)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_hundred[1d]),steps=100-16      105ms ± 1%     107ms ± 1%   +1.92%  (p=0.000 n=10+10)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_hundred[1d]),steps=1000-16     783ms ± 3%     775ms ± 1%   -1.02%  (p=0.019 n=9+9)
```

In summary, the runtime doesn't really improve with this change for
queries with just a few steps. For queries with many steps, this
commit essentially reinstates the old performance. This is good
because the many-step queries are the one that matter most (longest
absolute runtime).

In terms of allocations, though, this commit doesn't make a dent at
all (numbers not shown). The reason is that most of the allocations
happen in the sampleRingIterator (in the storage package), which has
to be addressed in a separate commit.

Signed-off-by: beorn7 <beorn@grafana.com>
2023-04-13 19:25:16 +02:00
Miguel Ángel Ortuño
e4b87a7a2a
api: export point marshaling functions (#11323)
Export `marshalTimestamp` and `marshalValue` functions by moving them under their own util package.

Signed-off-by: Miguel Ángel Ortuño <ortuman@gmail.com>
2022-09-29 20:16:48 +05:30