Grafana ships with a built-in Microsoft SQL Server (MSSQL) data source plugin that allows you to query and visualize data from any Microsoft SQL Server 2005 or newer, including Microsoft Azure SQL Database.
MSSQL 2008 and 2008 R2 engine cannot handle login records when SSL encryption is not disabled. Due to this you may receive an `Login error: EOF` error when trying to create your datasource.
To fix MSSQL 2008 R2 issue, install MSSQL 2008 R2 Service Pack 2. To fix MSSQL 2008 issue, install Microsoft MSSQL 2008 Service Pack 3 and Cumulative update package 3 for MSSQL 2008 SP3.
*$__timeEpoch(dateColumn)* | Will be replaced by an expression to convert a DATETIME column type to unix timestamp and rename it to *time*. <br/>For example, *DATEDIFF(second, '1970-01-01', dateColumn) AS time*
*$__timeFilter(dateColumn)* | Will be replaced by a time range filter using the specified column name. <br/>For example, *dateColumn BETWEEN '2017-04-21T05:01:17Z' AND '2017-04-21T05:06:17Z'*
*$__timeFrom()* | Will be replaced by the start of the currently active time selection. For example, *'2017-04-21T05:01:17Z'*
*$__timeTo()* | Will be replaced by the end of the currently active time selection. For example, *'2017-04-21T05:06:17Z'*
*$__timeGroup(dateColumn,'5m'[, fillvalue])* | Will be replaced by an expression usable in GROUP BY clause. Providing a *fillValue* of *NULL* or *floating value* will automatically fill empty series in timerange with that value. <br/>For example, *CAST(ROUND(DATEDIFF(second, '1970-01-01', time_column)/300.0, 0) as bigint)\*300*.
*$__timeGroup(dateColumn,'5m', 0)* | Same as above but with a fill parameter so missing points in that series will be added by grafana and 0 will be used as value.
*$__timeGroup(dateColumn,'5m', NULL)* | Same as above but NULL will be used as value for missing points.
*$__timeGroup(dateColumn,'5m', previous)* | Same as above but the previous value in that series will be used as fill value if no value has been seen yet NULL will be used (only available in Grafana 5.3+).
*$__unixEpochFilter(dateColumn)* | Will be replaced by a time range filter using the specified column name with times represented as unix timestamp. For example, *dateColumn > 1494410783 AND dateColumn < 1494497183*
*$__unixEpochFrom()* | Will be replaced by the start of the currently active time selection as unix timestamp. For example, *1494410783*
*$__unixEpochTo()* | Will be replaced by the end of the currently active time selection as unix timestamp. For example, *1494497183*
We plan to add many more macros. If you have suggestions for what macros you would like to see, please [open an issue](https://github.com/grafana/grafana) in our GitHub repo.
The query editor has a link named `Generated SQL` that shows up after a query has been executed, while in panel edit mode. Click on it and it will expand and show the raw interpolated SQL string that was executed.
If the `Format as` query option is set to `Table` then you can basically do any type of SQL query. The table panel will automatically show the results of whatever columns & rows your query returns.
GETDATE(), CAST(GETDATE() AS DATETIME2), CAST(GETDATE() AS SMALLDATETIME), CAST(GETDATE() AS DATE), CAST(GETDATE() AS TIME), SWITCHOFFSET(CAST(GETDATE() AS DATETIMEOFFSET), '-07:00'))
If you set `Format as` to `Time series`, for use in Graph panel for example, then the query must must have a column named `time` that returns either a sql datetime or any numeric datatype representing unix epoch in seconds. You may return a column named `metric` that is used as metric name for the value column. Any column except `time` and `metric` is treated as a value column. If you omit the `metric` column, the name of the value column will be the metric name. You may select multiple value columns, each will have its name as metric.
If you return multiple value columns and a column named `metric` then this column is used as prefix for the series name (only available in Grafana 5.3+).
When above query are used in a graph panel the result will be two series named `Metric A` and `Metric B` with value of `valueOne` and `valueTwo` plotted over `time`.
When above query are used in a graph panel the result will be two series named `valueOne` and `valueTwo` with value of `valueOne` and `valueTwo` plotted over `time`.
When above query are used in a graph panel the result will be two series named `Metric A` and `Metric B` with an average of `valueOne` plotted over `time`.
Any two series lacking a value in a 3 minute window will render a line between those two lines. You'll notice that the graph to the right never goes down to zero.
Instead of hard-coding things like server, application and sensor name in you metric queries you can use variables in their place. Variables are shown as dropdown select boxes at the top of the dashboard. These dropdowns makes it easy to change the data being displayed in your dashboard.
Checkout the [Templating]({{< relref "reference/templating.md" >}}) documentation for an introduction to the templating feature and the different types of template variables.
### Query Variable
If you add a template variable of the type `Query`, you can write a MSSQL query that can
return things like measurement names, key names or key values that are shown as a dropdown select box.
For example, you can have a variable that contains all values for the `hostname` column in a table if you specify a query like this in the templating variable *Query* setting.
```sql
SELECT hostname FROM host
```
A query can return multiple columns and Grafana will automatically create a list from them. For example, the query below will return a list with values from `hostname` and `hostname2`.
```sql
SELECT [host].[hostname], [other_host].[hostname2] FROM host JOIN other_host ON [host].[city] = [other_host].[city]
```
Another option is a query that can create a key/value variable. The query should return two columns that are named `__text` and `__value`. The `__text` column value should be unique (if it is not unique then the first value is used). The options in the dropdown will have a text and value that allows you to have a friendly name as text and an id as the value. An example query with `hostname` as the text and `id` as the value:
```sql
SELECT hostname __text, id __value FROM host
```
You can also create nested variables. For example if you had another variable named `region`. Then you could have
the hosts variable only show hosts from the current selected region with a query like this (if `region` is a multi-value variable then use the `IN` comparison operator rather than `=` to match against multiple values):
```sql
SELECT hostname FROM host WHERE region IN ($region)
> From Grafana 4.3.0 to 4.6.0, template variables are always quoted automatically so if it is a string value do not wrap them in quotes in where clauses.
>
> From Grafana 5.0.0, template variable values are only quoted when the template variable is a `multi-value`.
Grafana automatically creates a quoted, comma-separated string for multi-value variables. For example: if `server01` and `server02` are selected then it will be formatted as: `'server01', 'server02'`. Do disable quoting, use the csv formatting option for variables:
`${servers:csv}`
Read more about variable formatting options in the [Variables]({{< relref "reference/templating.md#advanced-formatting-options" >}}) documentation.
[Annotations]({{< relref "reference/annotations.md" >}}) allows you to overlay rich event information on top of graphs. You add annotation queries via the Dashboard menu / Annotations view.
Stored procedures have been verified to work. However, please note that we haven't done anything special to support this why there may exist edge cases where it won't work as you would expect.
Stored procedures should be supported in table, time series and annotation queries as long as you use the same naming of columns and return data in the same format as describe above under respective section.
Please note that any macro function will not work inside a stored procedure.
For the following examples the database table defined in [Time series queries](#time-series-queries). Let's say that we want to visualize 4 series in a graph panel, i.e. all combinations of columns `valueOne`, `valueTwo` and `measurement`. Graph panel to the right visualizes what we want to achieve. To solve this we actually need to use two queries:
It's now possible to configure datasources using config files with Grafana's provisioning system. You can read more about how it works and all the settings you can set for datasources on the [provisioning docs page](/administration/provisioning/#datasources)