The goal of this project is to build a PromQL lexer and parser capable of parsing PromQL that conforms with Prometheus Query.
To parse a simple instant vector selector expression:
use promql_parser::parser;
let promql = r#"http_requests_total{environment=~"staging|testing|development",method!="GET"} @ 1609746000 offset 5m"#;
match parser::parse(promql) {
Ok(ast) => println!("AST: {:?}", ast),
Err(info) => println!("Err: {:?}", info),
}
or you can directly run examples under this repo:
cargo run --example parser
This outputs:
AST: VectorSelector(VectorSelector { name: Some("http_requests_total"), matchers: Matchers { matchers: {Matcher { op: NotEqual, name: "method", value: "GET" }, Matcher { op: Re(staging|testing|development), name: "environment", value: "staging|testing|development" }, Matcher { op: Equal, name: "__name__", value: "http_requests_total" }} }, offset: Some(Pos(300s)), at: Some(At(SystemTime { tv_sec: 1609746000, tv_nsec: 0 })) })
This crate declares compatible with prometheus 0372e25, which is prometheus release 2.40 at Nov 29, 2022. Any revision on PromQL after this commit is not guaranteed.
There are a number of community projects that extend promql-parser or provide integrations with other systems.
- py-promql-parser Python binding of this crate.
Here are some of the projects known to use promql-parser:
- GreptimeDB Open Source & Cloud Native Distributed Time Series Database
If your project is using promql-parser, feel free to make a PR to add it to this list.
Contributions are highly encouraged!
Pull requests that add support for or fix a bug in a feature in the PromQL will likely be accepted after review.
All code in this repository is licensed under the Apache License 2.0.
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.