The AS OF SYSTEM TIME timestamp
clause causes statements to execute
using the database contents "as of" a specified time in the past.
This clause can be used to read historical data (also known as "time travel queries") and can also be advantageous for performance as it decreases transaction conflicts. For more details, see SQL Performance Best Practices.
Historical data is available only within the garbage collection window, which is determined by the ttlseconds
field in the replication zone configuration.
Synopsis
The AS OF SYSTEM TIME
clause is supported in multiple SQL contexts,
including but not limited to:
- In
SELECT
clauses, at the very end of theFROM
sub-clause. - In
BACKUP
, after the parameters of theTO
sub-clause. - In
RESTORE
, after the parameters of theFROM
sub-clause. - New in v19.1 In
BEGIN
, after theBEGIN
keyword. - New in v19.1 In
SET
, after theSET TRANSACTION
keyword.
Parameters
The timestamp
argument supports the following formats:
Format | Notes |
---|---|
INT |
Nanoseconds since the Unix epoch. |
negative INTERVAL |
Added to statement_timestamp() , and thus must be negative. |
STRING |
A TIMESTAMP , INT of nanoseconds, or negative INTERVAL . |
experimental_follower_read_timestamp() |
A function that runs your queries at a time as close as possible to the present time while remaining safe for follower reads. |
Examples
Select historical data (time-travel)
Imagine this example represents the database's current data:
> SELECT name, balance
FROM accounts
WHERE name = 'Edna Barath';
+-------------+---------+
| name | balance |
+-------------+---------+
| Edna Barath | 750 |
| Edna Barath | 2200 |
+-------------+---------+
We could instead retrieve the values as they were on October 3, 2016 at 12:45 UTC:
> SELECT name, balance
FROM accounts
AS OF SYSTEM TIME '2016-10-03 12:45:00'
WHERE name = 'Edna Barath';
+-------------+---------+
| name | balance |
+-------------+---------+
| Edna Barath | 450 |
| Edna Barath | 2000 |
+-------------+---------+
Using different timestamp formats
Assuming the following statements are run at 2016-01-01 12:00:00
, they would execute as of 2016-01-01 08:00:00
:
> SELECT * FROM t AS OF SYSTEM TIME '2016-01-01 08:00:00'
> SELECT * FROM t AS OF SYSTEM TIME 1451635200000000000
> SELECT * FROM t AS OF SYSTEM TIME '1451635200000000000'
> SELECT * FROM t AS OF SYSTEM TIME '-4h'
> SELECT * FROM t AS OF SYSTEM TIME INTERVAL '-4h'
Selecting from multiple tables
It is not yet possible to select from multiple tables at different timestamps. The entire query runs at the specified time in the past.
When selecting over multiple tables in a single FROM
clause, the AS
OF SYSTEM TIME
clause must appear at the very end and applies to the
entire SELECT
clause.
For example:
> SELECT * FROM t, u, v AS OF SYSTEM TIME '-4h';
> SELECT * FROM t JOIN u ON t.x = u.y AS OF SYSTEM TIME '-4h';
> SELECT * FROM (SELECT * FROM t), (SELECT * FROM u) AS OF SYSTEM TIME '-4h';
Using AS OF SYSTEM TIME
in subqueries
To enable time travel, the AS OF SYSTEM TIME
clause must appear in
at least the top-level statement. It is not valid to use it only in a
subquery.
For example, the following is invalid:
SELECT * FROM (SELECT * FROM t AS OF SYSTEM TIME '-4h'), u
To facilitate the composition of larger queries from simpler queries,
CockroachDB allows AS OF SYSTEM TIME
in sub-queries under the
following conditions:
- The top level query also specifies
AS OF SYSTEM TIME
. - All the
AS OF SYSTEM TIME
clauses specify the same timestamp.
For example:
> SELECT * FROM (SELECT * FROM t AS OF SYSTEM TIME '-4h') tp
JOIN u ON tp.x = u.y
AS OF SYSTEM TIME '-4h' -- same timestamp as above - OK.
WHERE x < 123;
Using AS OF SYSTEM TIME
in transactions
You can use the BEGIN
statement to execute the transaction using the database contents "as of" a specified time in the past.
> BEGIN AS OF SYSTEM TIME '2019-04-09 18:02:52.0+00:00';
> SELECT * FROM orders;
> SELECT * FROM products;
> COMMIT;
Alternatively, you can use the SET
statement to execute the transaction using the database contents "as of" a specified time in the past.
> BEGIN;
> SET TRANSACTION AS OF SYSTEM TIME '2019-04-09 18:02:52.0+00:00';
> SELECT * FROM orders;
> SELECT * FROM products;
> COMMIT;
See also
Tech note
Although the following format is supported, it is not intended to be used by most users.
HLC timestamps can be specified using a DECIMAL
. The
integer part is the wall time in nanoseconds. The fractional part is
the logical counter, a 10-digit integer. This is the same format as
produced by the cluster_logical_timestamp()
function.