Table: oci_nosql_table_metric_read_throttle_count_daily - Query OCI NoSQL Tables using SQL
Oracle NoSQL Database is a fully managed NoSQL database cloud service that provides on-demand throughput and storage-based provisioning. It allows for fast, flexible, and cost-effective data storing and querying, particularly for applications requiring single-digit millisecond latency. It supports both SQL-like querying and JSON documents.
Table Usage Guide
The oci_nosql_table_metric_read_throttle_count_daily
table provides insights into the daily read throttle counts of Oracle NoSQL Tables. As a database administrator or developer, you can use this table to understand the read throttle metrics of your NoSQL tables, which can help in performance tuning and cost management. The table can be very useful for identifying trends and patterns in read operations, and for making informed decisions about resource provisioning.
Examples
Basic info
Explore which NoSQL tables in your OCI environment have experienced read throttle events. This can help you identify potential performance bottlenecks and optimize your database management.
select name, timestamp, minimum, maximum, average, sum, sample_countfrom oci_nosql_table_metric_read_throttle_count_dailyorder by name, timestamp;
select name, timestamp, minimum, maximum, average, sum, sample_countfrom oci_nosql_table_metric_read_throttle_count_dailyorder by name, timestamp;
Intervals where read throttle count exceeded 100 average
Analyze the intervals where the read throttle count exceeded an average of 100. This is useful in identifying potential bottlenecks in your NoSQL database operations, allowing for timely intervention and optimization.
select name, timestamp, minimum, maximum, average, sum, sample_countfrom oci_nosql_table_metric_read_throttle_count_dailywhere average > 100order by name, timestamp;
select name, timestamp, minimum, maximum, average, sum, sample_countfrom oci_nosql_table_metric_read_throttle_count_dailywhere average > 100order by name, timestamp;
Schema for oci_nosql_table_metric_read_throttle_count_daily
Name | Type | Operators | Description |
---|---|---|---|
_ctx | jsonb | Steampipe context in JSON form. | |
average | double precision | The average of the metric values that correspond to the data point. | |
compartment_id | text | The ID of the compartment. | |
maximum | double precision | The maximum metric value for the data point. | |
metric_name | text | The name of the metric. | |
minimum | double precision | The minimum metric value for the data point. | |
name | text | The name of the NoSQL table. | |
namespace | text | The metric namespace. | |
region | text | The OCI region in which the resource is located. | |
sample_count | double precision | The number of metric values that contributed to the aggregate value of this data point. | |
sp_connection_name | text | =, !=, ~~, ~~*, !~~, !~~* | Steampipe connection name. |
sp_ctx | jsonb | Steampipe context in JSON form. | |
sum | double precision | The sum of the metric values for the data point. | |
tenant_id | text | =, !=, ~~, ~~*, !~~, !~~* | The OCID of the Tenant in which the resource is located. |
tenant_name | text | The name of the Tenant in which the resource is located. | |
timestamp | timestamp with time zone | The time stamp used for the data point. | |
unit | text | The standard unit for the data point. |
Export
This table is available as a standalone Exporter CLI. Steampipe exporters are stand-alone binaries that allow you to extract data using Steampipe plugins without a database.
You can download the tarball for your platform from the Releases page, but it is simplest to install them with the steampipe_export_installer.sh
script:
/bin/sh -c "$(curl -fsSL https://steampipe.io/install/export.sh)" -- oci
You can pass the configuration to the command with the --config
argument:
steampipe_export_oci --config '<your_config>' oci_nosql_table_metric_read_throttle_count_daily