StackState Query Language (STQL)

StackState Self-hosted v4.6.x

This page describes StackState version 4.6.

Go to the documentation for the latest StackState release.

Overview

This page describes how to use the built-in StackState Query Language (STQL) to write advanced topology component filters. STQL queries are used in StackState to write advanced topology filters.

An STQL query consists of component filters and functions. The query output is a component, or set of components, filtered from the complete topology.

STQL queries can be combined with scripts in the Analytics environment.

Component filters

Component filters are used in two ways in STQL:

  • Define the set of components to be included in the query output.

  • Specify the set of components to be handled by an in-built STQL function.

Filters

The filters described below can be combined using the available operators to achieve complex selections of components.

Filter
Default
Description

domain

"all"

Components in the specified domain(s).

environment

"all"

Components in the named environment.

healthstate

"all"

Components with the named health state.

label

"all"

Components with the named labels.

layer

"all"

Components in the named layer.

name

"all"

Components with the specified name.

type

"all"

Components of the specified type.

identifier

"all"

Components with the specified URN identifier. The identifier filter is only compatible with basic filtering when it is specified using identifier IN (...) and combined with other filters using an OR operator. When the set filter is compatible with basic filtering, the number of component identifiers queried will be reported in the Other filters box.

Operators

The operators described below are available to use in STQL queries. Note that boolean operators will be executed in the standard order: NOT, OR, AND.

Operator
Description
Example

=

Equality matching

name = "DLL_DB"

!=

Inequality matching

name != "DLL_DB"

IN

Value is in subset

name in ("DLL_DB", "J2EE_04")

NOT

Negation

name NOT in ("DLL_DB", "J2EE_04")

AND and OR

Filter based on more than one condition or sub-query

name = "DLL_DB" OR type = "database"

()

Use parenthesis to group results

(name = … AND type = …) OR (…)

For example:

# Return all components named DLL_DB or J2EE_04 regardless of type:
  name = DLL_DB OR name = J2EE_04 

# Return only databases named DLL_DB and host systems named J2EE_04:
  (name = DLL_DB AND type = database) OR (name = J2EE_04 AND type = "host systems")

Wildcard

You can use * as a full wildcard in a component filter. It is not possible to filter for partial matches using a wildcard character.

Examples

# Select all components
name = "*"

# Select all components with name "serviceB"
name = "serviceB"

# Select all components in the "application" layer:
layer = "application"

# Select all components named either "appA" or "appB" that do not have a label "bck"
name IN ("appA","appB") NOT label = "bck"

# Select all components named "appA" that do not have a label "bck" or "test"
name = "appA" NOT label in ("bck", "test")

Functions

withNeighborsOf

The function withNeighborsOf extends STQL query output, adding connected components in the specified direction(s). The number of topology levels included can be adjusted up to a maximum of 15.

withNeighborsOf(components=(), levels=, direction=)

To be compatible with basic filtering, the function can only be combined with other filters using an OR operator. When an advanced filter contains a function withNeighborsOf that is compatible with basic filtering, the number of components whose neighbors are queried for is shown in the Other filters box.

Parameters / fields

Parameter
Default
Allowed values
Description

components

"all"

A component filter

The component(s) for which the neighbors will be returned, see component filters.

levels

1

"all", [1:14]

The number of levels to include in the output. Use "all" to display all available levels (maximum 15)

direction

"both"

"up", "down", "both"

up: only components that depend on the named component(s) will be added down: only dependencies of the named component(s) will be added both: components that depend on and dependencies of the named component(s) will be added.

Example

The example below will return all components in the application layer that have a health state of either "CRITICAL" or "DEVIATING". Components with names "appA" or "appB" and their neighbors will also be included.

layer = "application"
  AND (healthstate = "CRITICAL" OR healthstate = "DEVIATING")
  OR withNeighborsOf(components = (name in ("appA","appB")))

withCauseOf - DEPRECATED

The withCauseOf function has been deprecated. This functionality has been replaced by the Root Cause Analysis section in the visualizer. The construct will be parsed, but will not produce any additional components.

Compatibility basic and advanced filters

You can switch between basic and advanced filtering by selecting Basic or Advanced under Filter Topology in the View Filters pane.

It is always possible to switch from Basic to Advanced filtering. The selected basic filters will be converted directly to an STQL query. For simple queries it is also possible to switch from Advanced to Basic filtering, however, some advanced queries are not compatible with basic filters.

  • Basic filters cannot contain an inequality.

  • Basic filters do not use =, rather they are formatted using the IN operator. For example name IN ("DLL_DB”) and not name = "DLL_DB”.

  • Basic filters use AND/OR in a specific way:

    • All items in each basic filter box are joined with an OR: layer IN ("business service", "applications", "databases")

    • The different basic filter boxes are chained together with an AND: layer IN ("business service") AND domain IN ("online banking”)

    • The Include components basic filter box (name) is the exception - this is chained to the other filter boxes with an OR: layer IN ("business service") AND domain IN ("online banking") OR name IN ("DLL_DB”)

    • The advanced filtering options withNeighborsOf function and identifier are only compatible with basic filtering if they are joined to other filters with an OR: layer in ("Processes") OR identifier IN ("urn:test:component")

If you try to switch from an Advanced filter to a Basic filter and the query is not compatible, StackState will let you know and ask for confirmation to continue as you will lose some of the set filters. Alternatively, you can choose to stay in advanced filtering.

See also

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