One of the major new features of Grafana 6.0 is the new query-focused Explore workflow for troubleshooting and/or for data exploration.
Grafana's dashboard UI is all about building dashboards for visualization. Explore strips away all the dashboard and panel options so that you can focus on the query. Iterate until you have a working query and then think about building a dashboard.
For infrastructure monitoring and incident response, you no longer need to switch to other tools to debug what went wrong. Explore allows you to dig deeper into your metrics and logs to find the cause. Grafana's new logging data source, [Loki](https://github.com/grafana/loki) is tightly integrated into Explore and allows you to correlate metrics and logs by viewing them side-by-side. This creates a new debugging workflow where you can:
If you just want to explore your data and do not want to create a dashboard then Explore makes this much easier. Explore will show the results as both a graph and a table enabling you to see trends in the data and more detail at the same time (if the data source supports both graph and table data).
There is a new Explore icon on the menu bar to the left. This opens a new empty Explore tab.
{{<docs-imageboximg="/img/docs/v60/explore_menu.png"class="docs-image--no-shadow"caption="Screenshot of the new Explore Icon">}}
If you want to start with an existing query in a panel then choose the Explore option from the Panel menu. This opens an Explore tab with the query from the panel and allows you to tweak or iterate in the query outside of your dashboard.
{{<docs-imageboximg="/img/docs/v60/explore_panel_menu.png"class="docs-image--no-shadow"caption="Screenshot of the new Explore option in the panel menu">}}
Choose your data source in the dropdown in the top left. Prometheus has a custom Explore implementation, the other data sources (for now) use their standard query editor.
The query field is where you can write your query and explore your data. There are three buttons beside the query field, a clear button (X), an add query button (+) and the remove query button (-). Just like the normal query editor, you can add and remove multiple queries.
The Split feature is an easy way to compare graphs and tables side-by-side or to look at related data together on one page. Click the split button to duplicate the current query and split the page into two side-by-side queries. It is possible to select another data source for the new query which for example, allows you to compare the same query for two different servers or to compare the staging environment to the production environment.
{{<docs-imageboximg="/img/docs/v60/explore_split.png"class="docs-image--no-shadow"caption="Screenshot of the new Explore option in the panel menu">}}
You can close the newly created query by clicking on the Close Split button.
## Prometheus-specific Features
The first version of Explore features a custom querying experience for Prometheus. When a query is executed, it actually executes two queries, a normal Prometheus query for the graph and an Instant Query for the table. An Instant Query returns the last value for each time series which shows a good summary of the data shown in the graph.
### Metrics Explorer
On the left-hand side of the query field is a `Metrics` button, clicking on this opens the Metric Explorer. This shows a hierarchical menu with metrics grouped by their prefix. For example, all the Alert Manager metrics will be grouped under the `alertmanager` prefix. This is a good starting point if you just want to explore which metrics are available.
{{<docs-imageboximg="/img/docs/v60/explore_metric_explorer.png"class="docs-image--no-shadow"caption="Screenshot of the new Explore option in the panel menu">}}
### Query Field
The Query field supports autocomplete for metric names, function and works mostly the same way as the standard Prometheus query editor. Press the enter key to execute a query.
The autocomplete menu can be trigger by pressing Ctrl + Space. The Autocomplete menu contains a new History section with a list of recently executed queries.
Suggestions can appear under the query field - click on them to update your query with the suggested change.
Click on the filter button <spantitle="Filter for label"class="logs-label__icon fa fa-search-plus"></span> in a labels column in the Table panel to add filters to the query expression. This works with multiple queries too - the filter will be added for all the queries.
Log data can be very repetitive and Explore can help by hiding duplicate log lines. There are a few different deduplication algorithms that you can use:
As mentioned, one of the log integrations is for the new open source log aggregation system from Grafana Labs - [Loki](https://github.com/grafana/loki). Loki is designed to be very cost effective, as it does not index the contents of the logs, but rather a set of labels for each log stream. The logs from Loki are queried in a similar way to querying with label selectors in Prometheus. It uses labels to group log streams which can be made to match up with your Prometheus labels. Read more about Grafana Loki [here](https://github.com/grafana/loki) or the Grafana Labs hosted variant: [Grafana Cloud Logs](https://grafana.com/loki).
See [Loki's data source documentation](../datasources/loki) on how to query for log data.
#### Switching from Metrics to Logs
If you switch from a Prometheus query to a logs query (you can do a split first to have your metrics and logs side by side) then it will keep the labels from your query that exist in the logs and use those to query the log streams. For example, the following Prometheus query: