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Common Table Expression (CTE)

CTEs are similar to Views in that they help you reduce the complexity of your queries, break down long and complex SQL statements, and improve readability and reusability.

You already read a CTE in the quickstart document.

What is a Common Table Expression (CTE)?

A Common Table Expression (CTE) is a temporary result set that you can reference within a SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE statement. CTEs help to break down complex queries into more readable parts and can be referenced multiple times within the same query.

Basic syntax of CTE

CTEs are typically defined using the WITH keyword. The basic syntax is as follows:

WITH cte_name [(column1, column2, ...)] AS (
QUERY
)
SELECT ...
FROM cte_name;

Example explanation

Next, we'll go through a complete example that demonstrates how to use CTEs, including data preparation, CTE creation, and usage.

Step 1: Create example data

Let's assume we have the following two tables:

  • grpc_latencies: Contains gRPC request latency data.
  • app_logs: Contains application log information.
CREATE TABLE grpc_latencies (
ts TIMESTAMP TIME INDEX,
host VARCHAR(255),
latency FLOAT,
PRIMARY KEY(host),
);

INSERT INTO grpc_latencies VALUES
('2023-10-01 10:00:00', 'host1', 120),
('2023-10-01 10:00:00', 'host2', 150),
('2023-10-01 10:00:05', 'host1', 130);

CREATE TABLE app_logs (
ts TIMESTAMP TIME INDEX,
host VARCHAR(255),
log TEXT,
log_level VARCHAR(50),
PRIMARY KEY(host, log_level),
);

INSERT INTO app_logs VALUES
('2023-10-01 10:00:00', 'host1', 'Error on service', 'ERROR'),
('2023-10-01 10:00:00', 'host2', 'All services OK', 'INFO'),
('2023-10-01 10:00:05', 'host1', 'Error connecting to DB', 'ERROR');

Step 2: Define and use CTEs

We will create two CTEs to calculate the 95th percentile latency and the number of error logs, respectively.

WITH 
metrics AS (
SELECT
ts,
host,
approx_percentile_cont(latency, 0.95) RANGE '5s' AS p95_latency
FROM
grpc_latencies
ALIGN '5s' FILL PREV
),
logs AS (
SELECT
ts,
host,
COUNT(log) RANGE '5s' AS num_errors
FROM
app_logs
WHERE
log_level = 'ERROR'
ALIGN '5s' BY (HOST)
)
SELECT
metrics.ts,
metrics.host,
metrics.p95_latency,
COALESCE(logs.num_errors, 0) AS num_errors
FROM
metrics
LEFT JOIN logs ON metrics.host = logs.host AND metrics.ts = logs.ts
ORDER BY
metrics.ts;

Output:

+---------------------+-------+-------------+------------+
| ts | host | p95_latency | num_errors |
+---------------------+-------+-------------+------------+
| 2023-10-01 10:00:00 | host2 | 150 | 0 |
| 2023-10-01 10:00:00 | host1 | 120 | 1 |
| 2023-10-01 10:00:05 | host1 | 130 | 1 |
+---------------------+-------+-------------+------------+

Detailed explanation

  1. Define CTEs:
  • metrics:

    WITH 
    metrics AS (
    SELECT
    ts,
    host,
    approx_percentile_cont(latency, 0.95) RANGE '5s' AS p95_latency
    FROM
    grpc_latencies
    ALIGN '5s' FILL PREV
    ),

    Here we use a range query to calculate the 95th percentile latency for each host within every 5-second window.

  • logs:

    logs AS (
    SELECT
    ts,
    host,
    COUNT(log) RANGE '5s' AS num_errors
    FROM
    app_logs
    WHERE
    log_level = 'ERROR'
    ALIGN '5s' BY (HOST)
    )

    Similarly, we calculate the number of error logs for each host within every 5-second window.

  1. Use CTEs: The final query part:
    SELECT
    metrics.ts,
    metrics.host,
    metrics.p95_latency,
    COALESCE(logs.num_errors, 0) AS num_errors
    FROM
    metrics
    LEFT JOIN logs ON metrics.host = logs.host AND metrics.ts = logs.ts
    ORDER BY
    metrics.ts;
    We perform a left join on the two CTE result sets to get a comprehensive analysis result.

Summary

With CTEs, you can break down complex SQL queries into more manageable and understandable parts. In this example, we created two CTEs to calculate the 95th percentile latency and the number of error logs separately and then merged them into the final query for analysis. Read more WITH.