--- aliases: - /docs/grafana/latest/alerting/fundamentals/annotation-label/labels-and-label-matchers/ description: Learn about labels and label matchers in alerting keywords: - grafana - alerting - guide - fundamentals title: Label matchers weight: 117 --- # How label matching works Use labels and label matchers to link alert rules to [notification policies]({{< relref "../../notifications/" >}}) and [silences]({{< relref "../../silences/" >}}). This allows for a very flexible way to manage your alert instances, specify which policy should handle them, and which alerts to silence. A label matchers consists of 3 distinct parts, the **label**, the **value** and the **operator**. - The **Label** field is the name of the label to match. It must exactly match the label name. - The **Value** field matches against the corresponding value for the specified **Label** name. How it matches depends on the **Operator** value. - The **Operator** field is the operator to match against the label value. The available operators are: | Operator | Description | | -------- | -------------------------------------------------- | | `=` | Select labels that are exactly equal to the value. | | `!=` | Select labels that are not equal to the value. | | `=~` | Select labels that regex-match the value. | | `!~` | Select labels that do not regex-match the value. | ## Example of a label matcher Imagine we've defined the following set of labels for our alert. `{ foo=bar, baz=qux, id=12 }` In this situation, - A label matcher defined as `foo=bar` will match this alert rule. - A label matcher defined as `foo!=bar` will _not_ match this alert rule. - A label matcher defined as `id=~[0-9]+` will match this alert rule. - A label matcher defined as `baz!~[0-9]+` will match this alert rule.