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The dblink extension is blacklisted by some cloud-hosting providers and is an unnecessary dependency for single-node operation. Since we don't plan to use dblink to implement clustering this PR removes the dependency.
148 lines
5.7 KiB
SQL
148 lines
5.7 KiB
SQL
\o /dev/null
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\ir include/create_single_db.sql
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\o
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-- Utility function for grouping/slotting time with a given interval.
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CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION date_group(
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field timestamp,
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group_interval interval
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)
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RETURNS timestamp LANGUAGE SQL STABLE AS
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$BODY$
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SELECT to_timestamp((EXTRACT(EPOCH from $1)::int /
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EXTRACT(EPOCH from group_interval)::int) *
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EXTRACT(EPOCH from group_interval)::int)::timestamp;
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$BODY$;
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CREATE TABLE PUBLIC."testNs" (
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"timeCustom" TIMESTAMP NOT NULL,
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device_id TEXT NOT NULL,
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series_0 DOUBLE PRECISION NULL,
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series_1 DOUBLE PRECISION NULL,
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series_2 DOUBLE PRECISION NULL,
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series_bool BOOLEAN NULL
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);
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CREATE INDEX ON PUBLIC."testNs" (device_id, "timeCustom" DESC NULLS LAST) WHERE device_id IS NOT NULL;
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SELECT * FROM create_hypertable('"public"."testNs"', 'timeCustom', 'device_id', 2, associated_schema_name=>'testNs' );
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\c single
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INSERT INTO PUBLIC."testNs"("timeCustom", device_id, series_0, series_1) VALUES
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('2009-11-12T01:00:00+00:00', 'dev1', 1.5, 1),
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('2009-11-12T01:00:00+00:00', 'dev1', 1.5, 2),
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('2009-11-10T23:00:02+00:00', 'dev1', 2.5, 3);
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SELECT _timescaledb_meta_api.close_chunk_end_immediate(c.id)
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FROM get_open_partition_for_key((SELECT id FROM _timescaledb_catalog.hypertable WHERE table_name = 'testNs'), 'dev1') part
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INNER JOIN _timescaledb_catalog.chunk c ON (c.partition_id = part.id);
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INSERT INTO PUBLIC."testNs"("timeCustom", device_id, series_0, series_1) VALUES
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('2009-11-10T23:00:00+00:00', 'dev2', 1.5, 1),
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('2009-11-10T23:00:00+00:00', 'dev2', 1.5, 2);
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SELECT * FROM PUBLIC."testNs";
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SET client_min_messages = WARNING;
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\echo 'The next 2 queries will differ in output between UTC and EST since the mod is on the 100th hour UTC'
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SET timezone = 'UTC';
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SELECT date_group("timeCustom", '100 days') AS time, sum(series_0)
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FROM PUBLIC."testNs" GROUP BY time ORDER BY time ASC;
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SET timezone = 'EST';
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SELECT date_group("timeCustom", '100 days') AS time, sum(series_0)
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FROM PUBLIC."testNs" GROUP BY time ORDER BY time ASC;
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\echo 'The rest of the queries will be the same in output between UTC and EST'
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SET timezone = 'UTC';
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ALTER DATABASE single SET timezone ='UTC';
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SELECT date_group("timeCustom", '1 day') AS time, sum(series_0)
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FROM PUBLIC."testNs" GROUP BY time ORDER BY time ASC;
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SET timezone = 'EST';
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ALTER DATABASE single SET timezone ='EST';
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SELECT date_group("timeCustom", '1 day') AS time, sum(series_0)
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FROM PUBLIC."testNs" GROUP BY time ORDER BY time ASC;
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SET timezone = 'UTC';
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ALTER DATABASE single SET timezone ='UTC';
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SELECT *
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FROM PUBLIC."testNs"
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WHERE "timeCustom" >= TIMESTAMP '2009-11-10T23:00:00'
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AND "timeCustom" < TIMESTAMP '2009-11-12T01:00:00' ORDER BY "timeCustom" DESC;
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SET timezone = 'EST';
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ALTER DATABASE single SET timezone ='EST';
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SELECT *
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FROM PUBLIC."testNs"
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WHERE "timeCustom" >= TIMESTAMP '2009-11-10T23:00:00'
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AND "timeCustom" < TIMESTAMP '2009-11-12T01:00:00' ORDER BY "timeCustom" DESC;
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SET timezone = 'UTC';
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ALTER DATABASE single SET timezone ='UTC';
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SELECT date_group("timeCustom", '1 day') AS time, sum(series_0)
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FROM PUBLIC."testNs" GROUP BY time ORDER BY time ASC LIMIT 2;
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SET timezone = 'EST';
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ALTER DATABASE single SET timezone ='EST';
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SELECT date_group("timeCustom", '1 day') AS time, sum(series_0)
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FROM PUBLIC."testNs" GROUP BY time ORDER BY time ASC LIMIT 2;
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------------------------------------
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-- Test time conversion functions --
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------------------------------------
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\set ON_ERROR_STOP 0
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SET timezone = 'UTC';
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ALTER DATABASE single SET timezone ='UTC';
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-- Conversion to timestamp using Postgres built-in function taking double
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SELECT to_timestamp(1486480176.236538);
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-- extension-specific version taking microsecond UNIX timestamp
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SELECT _timescaledb_internal.to_timestamp(1486480176236538);
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-- Should be the inverse of the statement above.
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SELECT _timescaledb_internal.to_unix_microseconds('2017-02-07 15:09:36.236538+00');
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-- In UNIX microseconds, BIGINT MAX is smaller than internal date upper bound
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-- and should therefore be OK. Further, converting to the internal postgres
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-- epoch cannot overflow a 64-bit INTEGER since the postgres epoch is at a
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-- later date compared to the UNIX epoch, and is therefore represented by a
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-- smaller number
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SELECT _timescaledb_internal.to_timestamp(9223372036854775807);
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-- Julian day zero is -210866803200000000 microseconds from UNIX epoch
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SELECT _timescaledb_internal.to_timestamp(-210866803200000000);
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\set VERBOSITY default
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-- Going beyond Julian day zero should give out-of-range error
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SELECT _timescaledb_internal.to_timestamp(-210866803200000001);
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-- Lower bound on date (should return the Julian day zero UNIX timestamp above)
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SELECT _timescaledb_internal.to_unix_microseconds('4714-11-24 00:00:00+00 BC');
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-- Going beyond lower bound on date should return out-of-range
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SELECT _timescaledb_internal.to_unix_microseconds('4714-11-23 23:59:59.999999+00 BC');
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-- The upper bound for Postgres TIMESTAMPTZ
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SELECT timestamp '294276-12-31 23:59:59.999999+00';
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-- Going beyond the upper bound, should fail
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SELECT timestamp '294276-12-31 23:59:59.999999+00' + interval '1 us';
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-- Cannot represent the upper bound timestamp with a UNIX microsecond timestamp
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-- since the Postgres epoch is at a later date than the UNIX epoch.
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SELECT _timescaledb_internal.to_unix_microseconds('294276-12-31 23:59:59.999999+00');
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-- Subtracting the difference between the two epochs (10957 days) should bring
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-- us within range.
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SELECT timestamp '294276-12-31 23:59:59.999999+00' - interval '10957 days';
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SELECT _timescaledb_internal.to_unix_microseconds('294247-01-01 23:59:59.999999');
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-- Adding one microsecond should take us out-of-range again
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SELECT timestamp '294247-01-01 23:59:59.999999' + interval '1 us';
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SELECT _timescaledb_internal.to_unix_microseconds(timestamp '294247-01-01 23:59:59.999999' + interval '1 us');
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