This documentation is for an out-of-date version of Apache Flink. We recommend you use the latest stable version.
Window Aggregation #
Window TVF Aggregation #
StreamingWindow aggregations are defined in the GROUP BY
clause contains “window_start” and “window_end” columns of the relation applied Windowing TVF. Just like queries with regular GROUP BY
clauses, queries with a group by window aggregation will compute a single result row per group.
SELECT ...
FROM <windowed_table> -- relation applied windowing TVF
GROUP BY window_start, window_end, ...
Unlike other aggregations on continuous tables, window aggregation do not emit intermediate results but only a final result, the total aggregation at the end of the window. Moreover, window aggregations purge all intermediate state when no longer needed.
Windowing TVFs #
Flink supports TUMBLE
, HOP
and CUMULATE
types of window aggregations, which can be defined on either event or processing time attributes. See Windowing TVF for more windowing functions information.
Here are some examples for TUMBLE
, HOP
and CUMULATE
window aggregations.
-- tables must have time attribute, e.g. `bidtime` in this table
Flink SQL> desc Bid;
+-------------+------------------------+------+-----+--------+---------------------------------+
| name | type | null | key | extras | watermark |
+-------------+------------------------+------+-----+--------+---------------------------------+
| bidtime | TIMESTAMP(3) *ROWTIME* | true | | | `bidtime` - INTERVAL '1' SECOND |
| price | DECIMAL(10, 2) | true | | | |
| item | STRING | true | | | |
| supplier_id | STRING | true | | | |
+-------------+------------------------+------+-----+--------+---------------------------------+
Flink SQL> SELECT * FROM Bid;
+------------------+-------+------+-------------+
| bidtime | price | item | supplier_id |
+------------------+-------+------+-------------+
| 2020-04-15 08:05 | 4.00 | C | supplier1 |
| 2020-04-15 08:07 | 2.00 | A | supplier1 |
| 2020-04-15 08:09 | 5.00 | D | supplier2 |
| 2020-04-15 08:11 | 3.00 | B | supplier2 |
| 2020-04-15 08:13 | 1.00 | E | supplier1 |
| 2020-04-15 08:17 | 6.00 | F | supplier2 |
+------------------+-------+------+-------------+
-- tumbling window aggregation
Flink SQL> SELECT window_start, window_end, SUM(price)
FROM TABLE(
TUMBLE(TABLE Bid, DESCRIPTOR(bidtime), INTERVAL '10' MINUTES))
GROUP BY window_start, window_end;
+------------------+------------------+-------+
| window_start | window_end | price |
+------------------+------------------+-------+
| 2020-04-15 08:00 | 2020-04-15 08:10 | 11.00 |
| 2020-04-15 08:10 | 2020-04-15 08:20 | 10.00 |
+------------------+------------------+-------+
-- hopping window aggregation
Flink SQL> SELECT window_start, window_end, SUM(price)
FROM TABLE(
HOP(TABLE Bid, DESCRIPTOR(bidtime), INTERVAL '5' MINUTES, INTERVAL '10' MINUTES))
GROUP BY window_start, window_end;
+------------------+------------------+-------+
| window_start | window_end | price |
+------------------+------------------+-------+
| 2020-04-15 08:00 | 2020-04-15 08:10 | 11.00 |
| 2020-04-15 08:05 | 2020-04-15 08:15 | 15.00 |
| 2020-04-15 08:10 | 2020-04-15 08:20 | 10.00 |
| 2020-04-15 08:15 | 2020-04-15 08:25 | 6.00 |
+------------------+------------------+-------+
-- cumulative window aggregation
Flink SQL> SELECT window_start, window_end, SUM(price)
FROM TABLE(
CUMULATE(TABLE Bid, DESCRIPTOR(bidtime), INTERVAL '2' MINUTES, INTERVAL '10' MINUTES))
GROUP BY window_start, window_end;
+------------------+------------------+-------+
| window_start | window_end | price |
+------------------+------------------+-------+
| 2020-04-15 08:00 | 2020-04-15 08:06 | 4.00 |
| 2020-04-15 08:00 | 2020-04-15 08:08 | 6.00 |
| 2020-04-15 08:00 | 2020-04-15 08:10 | 11.00 |
| 2020-04-15 08:10 | 2020-04-15 08:12 | 3.00 |
| 2020-04-15 08:10 | 2020-04-15 08:14 | 4.00 |
| 2020-04-15 08:10 | 2020-04-15 08:16 | 4.00 |
| 2020-04-15 08:10 | 2020-04-15 08:18 | 10.00 |
| 2020-04-15 08:10 | 2020-04-15 08:20 | 10.00 |
+------------------+------------------+-------+
Note: in order to better understand the behavior of windowing, we simplify the displaying of timestamp values to not show the trailing zeros, e.g. 2020-04-15 08:05
should be displayed as 2020-04-15 08:05:00.000
in Flink SQL Client if the type is TIMESTAMP(3)
.
GROUPING SETS #
Window aggregations also support GROUPING SETS
syntax. Grouping sets allow for more complex grouping operations than those describable by a standard GROUP BY
. Rows are grouped separately by each specified grouping set and aggregates are computed for each group just as for simple GROUP BY
clauses.
Window aggregations with GROUPING SETS
require both the window_start
and window_end
columns have to be in the GROUP BY
clause, but not in the GROUPING SETS
clause.
Flink SQL> SELECT window_start, window_end, supplier_id, SUM(price) as price
FROM TABLE(
TUMBLE(TABLE Bid, DESCRIPTOR(bidtime), INTERVAL '10' MINUTES))
GROUP BY window_start, window_end, GROUPING SETS ((supplier_id), ());
+------------------+------------------+-------------+-------+
| window_start | window_end | supplier_id | price |
+------------------+------------------+-------------+-------+
| 2020-04-15 08:00 | 2020-04-15 08:10 | (NULL) | 11.00 |
| 2020-04-15 08:00 | 2020-04-15 08:10 | supplier2 | 5.00 |
| 2020-04-15 08:00 | 2020-04-15 08:10 | supplier1 | 6.00 |
| 2020-04-15 08:10 | 2020-04-15 08:20 | (NULL) | 10.00 |
| 2020-04-15 08:10 | 2020-04-15 08:20 | supplier2 | 9.00 |
| 2020-04-15 08:10 | 2020-04-15 08:20 | supplier1 | 1.00 |
+------------------+------------------+-------------+-------+
Each sublist of GROUPING SETS
may specify zero or more columns or expressions and is interpreted the same way as though used directly in the GROUP BY
clause. An empty grouping set means that all rows are aggregated down to a single group, which is output even if no input rows were present.
References to the grouping columns or expressions are replaced by null values in result rows for grouping sets in which those columns do not appear.
ROLLUP #
ROLLUP
is a shorthand notation for specifying a common type of grouping set. It represents the given list of expressions and all prefixes of the list, including the empty list.
Window aggregations with ROLLUP
requires both the window_start
and window_end
columns have to be in the GROUP BY
clause, but not in the ROLLUP
clause.
For example, the following query is equivalent to the one above.
SELECT window_start, window_end, supplier_id, SUM(price) as price
FROM TABLE(
TUMBLE(TABLE Bid, DESCRIPTOR(bidtime), INTERVAL '10' MINUTES))
GROUP BY window_start, window_end, ROLLUP (supplier_id);
CUBE #
CUBE
is a shorthand notation for specifying a common type of grouping set. It represents the given list and all of its possible subsets - the power set.
Window aggregations with CUBE
requires both the window_start
and window_end
columns have to be in the GROUP BY
clause, but not in the CUBE
clause.
For example, the following two queries are equivalent.
SELECT window_start, window_end, item, supplier_id, SUM(price) as price
FROM TABLE(
TUMBLE(TABLE Bid, DESCRIPTOR(bidtime), INTERVAL '10' MINUTES))
GROUP BY window_start, window_end, CUBE (supplier_id, item);
SELECT window_start, window_end, item, supplier_id, SUM(price) as price
FROM TABLE(
TUMBLE(TABLE Bid, DESCRIPTOR(bidtime), INTERVAL '10' MINUTES))
GROUP BY window_start, window_end, GROUPING SETS (
(supplier_id, item),
(supplier_id ),
( item),
( )
)
Selecting Group Window Start and End Timestamps #
The start and end timestamps of group windows can be selected with the grouped window_start
and window_end
columns.
Cascading Window Aggregation #
The window_start
and window_end
columns are regular timestamp columns, not time attributes. Thus they can’t be used as time attributes in subsequent time-based operations.
In order to propagate time attributes, you need to additionally add window_time
column into GROUP BY
clause. The window_time
is the third column produced by Windowing TVFs which is a time attribute of the assigned window.
Adding window_time
into GROUP BY
clause makes window_time
also to be group key that can be selected. Then following queries can use this column for subsequent time-based operations, such as cascading window aggregations and Window TopN.
The following shows a cascading window aggregation where the first window aggregation propagates the time attribute for the second window aggregation.
-- tumbling 5 minutes for each supplier_id
CREATE VIEW window1 AS
SELECT window_start, window_end, window_time as rowtime, SUM(price) as partial_price
FROM TABLE(
TUMBLE(TABLE Bid, DESCRIPTOR(bidtime), INTERVAL '5' MINUTES))
GROUP BY supplier_id, window_start, window_end, window_time;
-- tumbling 10 minutes on the first window
SELECT window_start, window_end, SUM(partial_price) as total_price
FROM TABLE(
TUMBLE(TABLE window1, DESCRIPTOR(rowtime), INTERVAL '10' MINUTES))
GROUP BY window_start, window_end;
Group Window Aggregation #
Batch Streaming
Warning: Group Window Aggregation is deprecated. It’s encouraged to use Window TVF Aggregation which is more powerful and effective.
Compared to Group Window Aggregation, Window TVF Aggregation have many advantages, including:
- Have all performance optimizations mentioned in Performance Tuning.
- Support standard
GROUPING SETS
syntax.- Can apply Window TopN after window aggregation result.
- and so on.
Group Window Aggregations are defined in the GROUP BY
clause of a SQL query. Just like queries with regular GROUP BY
clauses, queries with a GROUP BY
clause that includes a group window function compute a single result row per group. The following group windows functions are supported for SQL on batch and streaming tables.
Group Window Functions #
Group Window Function | Description |
---|---|
TUMBLE(time_attr, interval) |
Defines a tumbling time window. A tumbling time window assigns rows to non-overlapping, continuous windows with a fixed duration (interval ). For example, a tumbling window of 5 minutes groups rows in 5 minutes intervals. Tumbling windows can be defined on event-time (stream + batch) or processing-time (stream). |
HOP(time_attr, interval, interval) |
Defines a hopping time window (called sliding window in the Table API). A hopping time window has a fixed duration (second interval parameter) and hops by a specified hop interval (first interval parameter). If the hop interval is smaller than the window size, hopping windows are overlapping. Thus, rows can be assigned to multiple windows. For example, a hopping window of 15 minutes size and 5 minute hop interval assigns each row to 3 different windows of 15 minute size, which are evaluated in an interval of 5 minutes. Hopping windows can be defined on event-time (stream + batch) or processing-time (stream). |
SESSION(time_attr, interval) |
Defines a session time window. Session time windows do not have a fixed duration but their bounds are defined by a time interval of inactivity, i.e., a session window is closed if no event appears for a defined gap period. For example a session window with a 30 minute gap starts when a row is observed after 30 minutes inactivity (otherwise the row would be added to an existing window) and is closed if no row is added within 30 minutes. Session windows can work on event-time (stream + batch) or processing-time (stream). |
Time Attributes #
For SQL queries on streaming tables, the time_attr
argument of the group window function must refer to a valid time attribute that specifies the processing time or event time of rows. See the documentation of time attributes to learn how to define time attributes.
For SQL on batch tables, the time_attr
argument of the group window function must be an attribute of type TIMESTAMP
.
Selecting Group Window Start and End Timestamps #
The start and end timestamps of group windows as well as time attributes can be selected with the following auxiliary functions:
Auxiliary Function | Description |
---|---|
TUMBLE_START(time_attr, interval) HOP_START(time_attr, interval, interval) SESSION_START(time_attr, interval) |
Returns the timestamp of the inclusive lower bound of the corresponding tumbling, hopping, or session window. |
TUMBLE_END(time_attr, interval) HOP_END(time_attr, interval, interval) SESSION_END(time_attr, interval) |
Returns the timestamp of the exclusive upper bound of the corresponding tumbling, hopping, or session window. Note: The exclusive upper bound timestamp cannot be used as a rowtime attribute in subsequent time-based operations, such as interval joins and group window or over window aggregations. |
TUMBLE_ROWTIME(time_attr, interval) HOP_ROWTIME(time_attr, interval, interval) SESSION_ROWTIME(time_attr, interval) |
Returns the timestamp of the inclusive upper bound of the corresponding tumbling, hopping, or session window. The resulting attribute is a rowtime attribute that can be used in subsequent time-based operations such as interval joins and group window or over window aggregations. |
TUMBLE_PROCTIME(time_attr, interval) HOP_PROCTIME(time_attr, interval, interval) SESSION_PROCTIME(time_attr, interval) |
Returns a proctime attribute that can be used in subsequent time-based operations such as interval joins and group window or over window aggregations. |
Note: Auxiliary functions must be called with exactly same arguments as the group window function in the GROUP BY
clause.
The following examples show how to specify SQL queries with group windows on streaming tables.
CREATE TABLE Orders (
user BIGINT,
product STRING,
amount INT,
order_time TIMESTAMP(3),
WATERMARK FOR order_time AS order_time - INTERVAL '1' MINUTE
) WITH (...);
SELECT
user,
TUMBLE_START(order_time, INTERVAL '1' DAY) AS wStart,
SUM(amount) FROM Orders
GROUP BY
TUMBLE(order_time, INTERVAL '1' DAY),
user