Search Postgresql Archives

Re: Summing activity intervals without any obvious column to group by

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



On Aug 13, 2012, at 20:28, Carey Tilden <carey.tilden@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> Apologies for the awkward title.  I haven't quite thought of the right way to describe my problem, which may be why I've had a hard time figuring out how to solve it.  I have a list of program start/stop times, and I want to know how long each run takes to complete.  The thing that's really tripping me up is there are gaps in the sequence.  I've figured out how to collapse the results down to a single row per attempt, but I can't quite figure out how to further collapse down each full run to its own row.  It'd be easy if I had a session_id or something to group on, but I don't.  All I have are the start/stop times.
> 
> Here's some sample data.  Hopefully this clarifies what I'm talking about:
> 
>     drop table if exists program_runs;
>     
>     create temporary table program_runs (
>         id serial,
>         time_stamp timestamptz,
>         action text
>     );
>     
>     insert into program_runs (time_stamp, action) values
>         ('2012-01-01 10:00:00 PST', 'started'), ('2012-01-01 10:10:00 PST', 'stopped early'),
>         ('2012-01-01 10:20:00 PST', 'started'), ('2012-01-01 10:30:00 PST', 'stopped early'),
>         ('2012-01-01 10:40:00 PST', 'started'), ('2012-01-01 10:47:00 PST', 'completed'),
>         ('2012-01-01 10:50:00 PST', 'started'), ('2012-01-01 11:00:00 PST', 'stopped early'),
>         ('2012-01-01 11:10:00 PST', 'started'), ('2012-01-01 11:13:00 PST', 'completed'),
>         ('2012-01-01 11:20:00 PST', 'started'), ('2012-01-01 11:30:00 PST', 'stopped early'),
>         ('2012-01-01 11:40:00 PST', 'started'), ('2012-01-01 11:50:00 PST', 'stopped early'),
>         ('2012-01-01 12:00:00 PST', 'started'), ('2012-01-01 12:10:00 PST', 'stopped early'),
>         ('2012-01-01 12:20:00 PST', 'started'), ('2012-01-01 12:29:00 PST', 'completed');
>     
>     select
>         this_time_stamp as starting_time_stamp,
>         next_time_stamp - this_time_stamp as time_elapsed,
>         next_action as closing_action
>     from (
>         select
>             time_stamp as this_time_stamp, lead(time_stamp) over (order by id) as next_time_stamp,
>             action as this_action, lead(action) over (order by id) as next_action,
>             id as this_id, lead(id) over (order by id) as next_id
>         from program_runs
>     ) q
>     where this_action = 'started';
> 
> Note that each run has a pair of entries in the table.  The first is always "started", but the second may be either "stopped early" or "completed".  The final results I'd like to see are:
> 
>       starting_time_stamp   | total_time_elapsed 
>     ------------------------+--------------------
>      2012-01-01 10:00:00-08 | 00:27:00
>      2012-01-01 10:50:00-08 | 00:13:00
>      2012-01-01 11:20:00-08 | 00:39:00
> 
> Hope that's enough detail.  Any ideas or suggestions gladly accepted!
> 
> Regards,
> Carey

First artificially generate row (pair) identifiers by integer dividing the ordered row number by 2.

Using window or sub-queries identify the bookends for each group (i.e., the identifier for each completed and the prior completed).  Give these groups artificial session identifiers/row numbers.

Assign the artificial session id to each transaction row by using the bookends.

Now you have identifiers with which to group.

This makes a number of assumptions regarding the form of the input data. It will solve for your example data but it may not generalize.  In particular it assumes non-overlapping sessions.

HTH

David J.

-- 
Sent via pgsql-general mailing list (pgsql-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-general



[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
[Index of Archives]     [Postgresql Jobs]     [Postgresql Admin]     [Postgresql Performance]     [Linux Clusters]     [PHP Home]     [PHP on Windows]     [Kernel Newbies]     [PHP Classes]     [PHP Books]     [PHP Databases]     [Postgresql & PHP]     [Yosemite]
  Powered by Linux