Use regular expressions in Flux
Regular expressions (regexes) are incredibly powerful when matching patterns in large collections of data. With Flux, regular expressions are primarily used for evaluation logic in predicate functions for things such as filtering rows, dropping and keeping columns, state detection, etc. This guide shows how to use regular expressions in your Flux scripts.
If you’re just getting started with Flux queries, check out the following:
- Get started with Flux for a conceptual overview of Flux and parts of a Flux query.
- Execute queries to discover a variety of ways to run your queries.
Go regular expression syntax
Flux uses Go’s regexp package for regular expression search. The links below provide information about Go’s regular expression syntax.
Regular expression operators
Flux provides two comparison operators for use with regular expressions.
=~
When the expression on the left MATCHES the regular expression on the right, this evaluates to true
.
!~
When the expression on the left DOES NOT MATCH the regular expression on the right, this evaluates to true
.
Regular expressions in Flux
When using regex matching in your Flux scripts, enclose your regular expressions with /
.
The following is the basic regex comparison syntax:
Basic regex comparison syntax
expression =~ /regex/
expression !~ /regex/
Examples
Use a regex to filter by tag value
The following example filters records by the cpu
tag.
It only keeps records for which the cpu
is either cpu0
, cpu1
, or cpu2
.
from(bucket: "db/rp")
|> range(start: -15m)
|> filter(fn: (r) =>
r._measurement == "cpu" and
r._field == "usage_user" and
r.cpu =~ /cpu[0-2]/
)
Use a regex to filter by field key
The following example excludes records that do not have _percent
in a field key.
from(bucket: "db/rp")
|> range(start: -15m)
|> filter(fn: (r) =>
r._measurement == "mem" and
r._field =~ /_percent/
)
Drop columns matching a regex
The following example drops columns whose names do not being with _
.
from(bucket: "db/rp")
|> range(start: -15m)
|> filter(fn: (r) => r._measurement == "mem")
|> drop(fn: (column) => column !~ /_.*/)
Helpful links
Syntax documentation
regexp Syntax GoDoc
RE2 Syntax Overview
Go regex testers
Regex Tester - Golang
Regex101