grafana/kinds/dashboard/dashboard_kind.cue
Jeroen Op 't Eynde e1685cb44b
fix: set schemaVersion on dashboard schema (CUE) (#87712)
* fix: set schemaVersion on dashboard schema (CUE)

* docs: add comment to migration code

* fix: run make gen-cue
2024-05-28 16:16:20 +02:00

743 lines
35 KiB
CUE
Raw Blame History

This file contains ambiguous Unicode characters

This file contains Unicode characters that might be confused with other characters. If you think that this is intentional, you can safely ignore this warning. Use the Escape button to reveal them.

package kind
import (
"strings"
t "time"
)
name: "Dashboard"
maturity: "experimental"
description: "A Grafana dashboard."
crd: dummySchema: true
lineage: schemas: [{
version: [0, 0]
schema: {
spec: {
// Unique numeric identifier for the dashboard.
// `id` is internal to a specific Grafana instance. `uid` should be used to identify a dashboard across Grafana instances.
id?: int64 | null // TODO eliminate this null option
// Unique dashboard identifier that can be generated by anyone. string (8-40)
uid?: string
// Title of dashboard.
title?: string
// Description of dashboard.
description?: string
// This property should only be used in dashboards defined by plugins. It is a quick check
// to see if the version has changed since the last time.
revision?: int64
// ID of a dashboard imported from the https://grafana.com/grafana/dashboards/ portal
gnetId?: string
// Tags associated with dashboard.
tags?: [...string]
// Timezone of dashboard. Accepted values are IANA TZDB zone ID or "browser" or "utc".
timezone?: string | *"browser"
// Whether a dashboard is editable or not.
editable?: bool | *true
// Configuration of dashboard cursor sync behavior.
// Accepted values are 0 (sync turned off), 1 (shared crosshair), 2 (shared crosshair and tooltip).
graphTooltip?: #DashboardCursorSync
// Time range for dashboard.
// Accepted values are relative time strings like {from: 'now-6h', to: 'now'} or absolute time strings like {from: '2020-07-10T08:00:00.000Z', to: '2020-07-10T14:00:00.000Z'}.
time?: {
from: string | *"now-6h"
to: string | *"now"
}
// Configuration of the time picker shown at the top of a dashboard.
timepicker?: #TimePickerConfig
// The month that the fiscal year starts on. 0 = January, 11 = December
fiscalYearStartMonth?: uint8 & <12 | *0
// When set to true, the dashboard will redraw panels at an interval matching the pixel width.
// This will keep data "moving left" regardless of the query refresh rate. This setting helps
// avoid dashboards presenting stale live data
liveNow?: bool
// Day when the week starts. Expressed by the name of the day in lowercase, e.g. "monday".
weekStart?: string
// Refresh rate of dashboard. Represented via interval string, e.g. "5s", "1m", "1h", "1d".
refresh?: string
// Version of the JSON schema, incremented each time a Grafana update brings
// changes to said schema.
schemaVersion: uint16 | *39
// Version of the dashboard, incremented each time the dashboard is updated.
version?: uint32
// List of dashboard panels
panels?: [...(#Panel | #RowPanel)]
// Configured template variables
templating?: {
// List of configured template variables with their saved values along with some other metadata
list?: [...#VariableModel]
}
// Contains the list of annotations that are associated with the dashboard.
// Annotations are used to overlay event markers and overlay event tags on graphs.
// Grafana comes with a native annotation store and the ability to add annotation events directly from the graph panel or via the HTTP API.
// See https://grafana.com/docs/grafana/latest/dashboards/build-dashboards/annotate-visualizations/
annotations?: #AnnotationContainer
// Links with references to other dashboards or external websites.
links?: [...#DashboardLink]
// Snapshot options. They are present only if the dashboard is a snapshot.
snapshot?: #Snapshot @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
} @cuetsy(kind="interface") @grafana(TSVeneer="type")
///////////////////////////////////////
// Definitions (referenced above) are declared below
// TODO: this should be a regular DataQuery that depends on the selected dashboard
// these match the properties of the "grafana" datasouce that is default in most dashboards
#AnnotationTarget: {
// Only required/valid for the grafana datasource...
// but code+tests is already depending on it so hard to change
limit: int64
// Only required/valid for the grafana datasource...
// but code+tests is already depending on it so hard to change
matchAny: bool
// Only required/valid for the grafana datasource...
// but code+tests is already depending on it so hard to change
tags: [...string]
// Only required/valid for the grafana datasource...
// but code+tests is already depending on it so hard to change
type: string
... // datasource will stick their raw DataQuery here
} @cuetsy(kind="interface") @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
#AnnotationPanelFilter: {
// Should the specified panels be included or excluded
exclude?: bool | *false
// Panel IDs that should be included or excluded
ids: [...uint8]
} @cuetsy(kind="interface")
// Contains the list of annotations that are associated with the dashboard.
// Annotations are used to overlay event markers and overlay event tags on graphs.
// Grafana comes with a native annotation store and the ability to add annotation events directly from the graph panel or via the HTTP API.
// See https://grafana.com/docs/grafana/latest/dashboards/build-dashboards/annotate-visualizations/
#AnnotationContainer: {
// List of annotations
list?: [...#AnnotationQuery]
} @cuetsy(kind="interface") @grafana(TSVeneer="type")
// TODO docs
// FROM: AnnotationQuery in grafana-data/src/types/annotations.ts
#AnnotationQuery: {
// Name of annotation.
name: string
// Datasource where the annotations data is
datasource: #DataSourceRef
// When enabled the annotation query is issued with every dashboard refresh
enable: bool | *true
// Annotation queries can be toggled on or off at the top of the dashboard.
// When hide is true, the toggle is not shown in the dashboard.
hide?: bool | *false
// Color to use for the annotation event markers
iconColor: string
// Filters to apply when fetching annotations
filter?: #AnnotationPanelFilter
// TODO.. this should just be a normal query target
target?: #AnnotationTarget
// TODO -- this should not exist here, it is based on the --grafana-- datasource
type?: string @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
// Set to 1 for the standard annotation query all dashboards have by default.
builtIn?: number | *0
// unless datasources have migrated to the target+mapping,
// they just spread their query into the base object :(
...
} @cuetsy(kind="interface") @grafana(TSVeneer="type") @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
// A variable is a placeholder for a value. You can use variables in metric queries and in panel titles.
#VariableModel: {
// Type of variable
type: #VariableType
// Name of variable
name: string
// Optional display name
label?: string
// Visibility configuration for the variable
hide?: #VariableHide
// Whether the variable value should be managed by URL query params or not
skipUrlSync?: bool | *false
// Description of variable. It can be defined but `null`.
description?: string
// Query used to fetch values for a variable
query?: string | {...}
// Data source used to fetch values for a variable. It can be defined but `null`.
datasource?: #DataSourceRef
// Shows current selected variable text/value on the dashboard
current?: #VariableOption
// Whether multiple values can be selected or not from variable value list
multi?: bool | *false
// Options that can be selected for a variable.
options?: [...#VariableOption]
// Options to config when to refresh a variable
refresh?: #VariableRefresh
// Options sort order
sort?: #VariableSort
// Whether all value option is available or not
includeAll?: bool | *false
// Custom all value
allValue?: string
// Optional field, if you want to extract part of a series name or metric node segment.
// Named capture groups can be used to separate the display text and value.
regex?: string
...
} @cuetsy(kind="interface") @grafana(TSVeneer="type") @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
// Option to be selected in a variable.
#VariableOption: {
// Whether the option is selected or not
selected?: bool
// Text to be displayed for the option
text: string | [...string]
// Value of the option
value: string | [...string]
} @cuetsy(kind="interface")
// Options to config when to refresh a variable
// `0`: Never refresh the variable
// `1`: Queries the data source every time the dashboard loads.
// `2`: Queries the data source when the dashboard time range changes.
#VariableRefresh: 0 | 1 | 2 @cuetsy(kind="enum",memberNames="never|onDashboardLoad|onTimeRangeChanged")
// Determine if the variable shows on dashboard
// Accepted values are 0 (show label and value), 1 (show value only), 2 (show nothing).
#VariableHide: 0 | 1 | 2 @cuetsy(kind="enum",memberNames="dontHide|hideLabel|hideVariable") @grafana(TSVeneer="type")
// Sort variable options
// Accepted values are:
// `0`: No sorting
// `1`: Alphabetical ASC
// `2`: Alphabetical DESC
// `3`: Numerical ASC
// `4`: Numerical DESC
// `5`: Alphabetical Case Insensitive ASC
// `6`: Alphabetical Case Insensitive DESC
// `7`: Natural ASC
// `8`: Natural DESC
#VariableSort: 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 @cuetsy(kind="enum",memberNames="disabled|alphabeticalAsc|alphabeticalDesc|numericalAsc|numericalDesc|alphabeticalCaseInsensitiveAsc|alphabeticalCaseInsensitiveDesc|naturalAsc|naturalDesc")
// Ref to a DataSource instance
#DataSourceRef: {
// The plugin type-id
type?: string
// Specific datasource instance
uid?: string
} @cuetsy(kind="interface") @grafana(TSVeneer="type")
// Links with references to other dashboards or external resources
#DashboardLink: {
// Title to display with the link
title: string
// Link type. Accepted values are dashboards (to refer to another dashboard) and link (to refer to an external resource)
type: #DashboardLinkType
// Icon name to be displayed with the link
icon: string
// Tooltip to display when the user hovers their mouse over it
tooltip: string
// Link URL. Only required/valid if the type is link
url?: string
// List of tags to limit the linked dashboards. If empty, all dashboards will be displayed. Only valid if the type is dashboards
tags: [...string]
// If true, all dashboards links will be displayed in a dropdown. If false, all dashboards links will be displayed side by side. Only valid if the type is dashboards
asDropdown: bool | *false
// If true, the link will be opened in a new tab
targetBlank: bool | *false
// If true, includes current template variables values in the link as query params
includeVars: bool | *false
// If true, includes current time range in the link as query params
keepTime: bool | *false
} @cuetsy(kind="interface")
// Dashboard Link type. Accepted values are dashboards (to refer to another dashboard) and link (to refer to an external resource)
#DashboardLinkType: "link" | "dashboards" @cuetsy(kind="type")
// Dashboard variable type
// `query`: Query-generated list of values such as metric names, server names, sensor IDs, data centers, and so on.
// `adhoc`: Key/value filters that are automatically added to all metric queries for a data source (Prometheus, Loki, InfluxDB, and Elasticsearch only).
// `constant`: Define a hidden constant.
// `datasource`: Quickly change the data source for an entire dashboard.
// `interval`: Interval variables represent time spans.
// `textbox`: Display a free text input field with an optional default value.
// `custom`: Define the variable options manually using a comma-separated list.
// `system`: Variables defined by Grafana. See: https://grafana.com/docs/grafana/latest/dashboards/variables/add-template-variables/#global-variables
#VariableType: "query" | "adhoc" | "groupby" | "constant" | "datasource" | "interval" | "textbox" | "custom" | "system" @cuetsy(kind="type") @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
// Color mode for a field. You can specify a single color, or select a continuous (gradient) color schemes, based on a value.
// Continuous color interpolates a color using the percentage of a value relative to min and max.
// Accepted values are:
// `thresholds`: From thresholds. Informs Grafana to take the color from the matching threshold
// `palette-classic`: Classic palette. Grafana will assign color by looking up a color in a palette by series index. Useful for Graphs and pie charts and other categorical data visualizations
// `palette-classic-by-name`: Classic palette (by name). Grafana will assign color by looking up a color in a palette by series name. Useful for Graphs and pie charts and other categorical data visualizations
// `continuous-GrYlRd`: ontinuous Green-Yellow-Red palette mode
// `continuous-RdYlGr`: Continuous Red-Yellow-Green palette mode
// `continuous-BlYlRd`: Continuous Blue-Yellow-Red palette mode
// `continuous-YlRd`: Continuous Yellow-Red palette mode
// `continuous-BlPu`: Continuous Blue-Purple palette mode
// `continuous-YlBl`: Continuous Yellow-Blue palette mode
// `continuous-blues`: Continuous Blue palette mode
// `continuous-reds`: Continuous Red palette mode
// `continuous-greens`: Continuous Green palette mode
// `continuous-purples`: Continuous Purple palette mode
// `shades`: Shades of a single color. Specify a single color, useful in an override rule.
// `fixed`: Fixed color mode. Specify a single color, useful in an override rule.
#FieldColorModeId: "thresholds" | "palette-classic" | "palette-classic-by-name" | "continuous-GrYlRd" | "continuous-RdYlGr" | "continuous-BlYlRd" | "continuous-YlRd" | "continuous-BlPu" | "continuous-YlBl" | "continuous-blues" | "continuous-reds" | "continuous-greens" | "continuous-purples" | "fixed" | "shades" @cuetsy(kind="enum",memberNames="Thresholds|PaletteClassic|PaletteClassicByName|ContinuousGrYlRd|ContinuousRdYlGr|ContinuousBlYlRd|ContinuousYlRd|ContinuousBlPu|ContinuousYlBl|ContinuousBlues|ContinuousReds|ContinuousGreens|ContinuousPurples|Fixed|Shades") @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
// Defines how to assign a series color from "by value" color schemes. For example for an aggregated data points like a timeseries, the color can be assigned by the min, max or last value.
#FieldColorSeriesByMode: "min" | "max" | "last" @cuetsy(kind="type")
// Map a field to a color.
#FieldColor: {
// The main color scheme mode.
mode: #FieldColorModeId
// The fixed color value for fixed or shades color modes.
fixedColor?: string
// Some visualizations need to know how to assign a series color from by value color schemes.
seriesBy?: #FieldColorSeriesByMode
} @cuetsy(kind="interface")
// Position and dimensions of a panel in the grid
#GridPos: {
// Panel height. The height is the number of rows from the top edge of the panel.
h: uint32 & >0 | *9
// Panel width. The width is the number of columns from the left edge of the panel.
w: uint32 & >0 & <=24 | *12
// Panel x. The x coordinate is the number of columns from the left edge of the grid
x: uint32 & >=0 & <24 | *0
// Panel y. The y coordinate is the number of rows from the top edge of the grid
y: uint32 & >=0 | *0
// Whether the panel is fixed within the grid. If true, the panel will not be affected by other panels' interactions
static?: bool
} @cuetsy(kind="interface")
// User-defined value for a metric that triggers visual changes in a panel when this value is met or exceeded
// They are used to conditionally style and color visualizations based on query results , and can be applied to most visualizations.
#Threshold: {
// Value represents a specified metric for the threshold, which triggers a visual change in the dashboard when this value is met or exceeded.
// Nulls currently appear here when serializing -Infinity to JSON.
value: number | null @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
// Color represents the color of the visual change that will occur in the dashboard when the threshold value is met or exceeded.
color: string @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
} @cuetsy(kind="interface") @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
// Thresholds can either be `absolute` (specific number) or `percentage` (relative to min or max, it will be values between 0 and 1).
#ThresholdsMode: "absolute" | "percentage" @cuetsy(kind="enum",memberNames="Absolute|Percentage")
// Thresholds configuration for the panel
#ThresholdsConfig: {
// Thresholds mode.
mode: #ThresholdsMode
// Must be sorted by 'value', first value is always -Infinity
steps: [...#Threshold] @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
} @cuetsy(kind="interface") @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
// Allow to transform the visual representation of specific data values in a visualization, irrespective of their original units
#ValueMapping: #ValueMap | #RangeMap | #RegexMap | #SpecialValueMap @cuetsy(kind="type") @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
// Supported value mapping types
// `value`: Maps text values to a color or different display text and color. For example, you can configure a value mapping so that all instances of the value 10 appear as Perfection! rather than the number.
// `range`: Maps numerical ranges to a display text and color. For example, if a value is within a certain range, you can configure a range value mapping to display Low or High rather than the number.
// `regex`: Maps regular expressions to replacement text and a color. For example, if a value is www.example.com, you can configure a regex value mapping so that Grafana displays www and truncates the domain.
// `special`: Maps special values like Null, NaN (not a number), and boolean values like true and false to a display text and color. See SpecialValueMatch to see the list of special values. For example, you can configure a special value mapping so that null values appear as N/A.
#MappingType: "value" | "range" | "regex" | "special" @cuetsy(kind="enum",memberNames="ValueToText|RangeToText|RegexToText|SpecialValue") @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
// Maps text values to a color or different display text and color.
// For example, you can configure a value mapping so that all instances of the value 10 appear as Perfection! rather than the number.
#ValueMap: {
type: #MappingType & "value"
// Map with <value_to_match>: ValueMappingResult. For example: { "10": { text: "Perfection!", color: "green" } }
options: [string]: #ValueMappingResult
} @cuetsy(kind="interface")
// Maps numerical ranges to a display text and color.
// For example, if a value is within a certain range, you can configure a range value mapping to display Low or High rather than the number.
#RangeMap: {
type: #MappingType & "range"
// Range to match against and the result to apply when the value is within the range
options: {
// Min value of the range. It can be null which means -Infinity
from: float64 | null
// Max value of the range. It can be null which means +Infinity
to: float64 | null
// Config to apply when the value is within the range
result: #ValueMappingResult
}
} @cuetsy(kind="interface") @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
// Maps regular expressions to replacement text and a color.
// For example, if a value is www.example.com, you can configure a regex value mapping so that Grafana displays www and truncates the domain.
#RegexMap: {
type: #MappingType & "regex"
// Regular expression to match against and the result to apply when the value matches the regex
options: {
// Regular expression to match against
pattern: string
// Config to apply when the value matches the regex
result: #ValueMappingResult
}
} @cuetsy(kind="interface") @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
// Maps special values like Null, NaN (not a number), and boolean values like true and false to a display text and color.
// See SpecialValueMatch to see the list of special values.
// For example, you can configure a special value mapping so that null values appear as N/A.
#SpecialValueMap: {
type: #MappingType & "special"
options: {
// Special value to match against
match: #SpecialValueMatch
// Config to apply when the value matches the special value
result: #ValueMappingResult
}
} @cuetsy(kind="interface") @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
// Special value types supported by the `SpecialValueMap`
#SpecialValueMatch: "true" | "false" | "null" | "nan" | "null+nan" | "empty" @cuetsy(kind="enum",memberNames="True|False|Null|NaN|NullAndNan|Empty")
// Result used as replacement with text and color when the value matches
#ValueMappingResult: {
// Text to display when the value matches
text?: string
// Text to use when the value matches
color?: string
// Icon to display when the value matches. Only specific visualizations.
icon?: string
// Position in the mapping array. Only used internally.
index?: int32
} @cuetsy(kind="interface")
// Transformations allow to manipulate data returned by a query before the system applies a visualization.
// Using transformations you can: rename fields, join time series data, perform mathematical operations across queries,
// use the output of one transformation as the input to another transformation, etc.
#DataTransformerConfig: {
// Unique identifier of transformer
id: string
// Disabled transformations are skipped
disabled?: bool
// Optional frame matcher. When missing it will be applied to all results
filter?: #MatcherConfig
// Where to pull DataFrames from as input to transformation
topic?: "series" | "annotations" | "alertStates" // replaced with common.DataTopic
// Options to be passed to the transformer
// Valid options depend on the transformer id
options: _
} @cuetsy(kind="interface") @grafana(TSVeneer="type")
// Time picker configuration
// It defines the default config for the time picker and the refresh picker for the specific dashboard.
#TimePickerConfig: {
// Whether timepicker is visible or not.
hidden?: bool | *false
// Interval options available in the refresh picker dropdown.
refresh_intervals?: [...string] | *["5s", "10s", "30s", "1m", "5m", "15m", "30m", "1h", "2h", "1d"]
// Selectable options available in the time picker dropdown. Has no effect on provisioned dashboard.
time_options?: [...string] | *["5m", "15m", "1h", "6h", "12h", "24h", "2d", "7d", "30d"]
// Override the now time by entering a time delay. Use this option to accommodate known delays in data aggregation to avoid null values.
nowDelay?: string
} @cuetsy(kind="interface") @grafana(TSVeneer="type")
// 0 for no shared crosshair or tooltip (default).
// 1 for shared crosshair.
// 2 for shared crosshair AND shared tooltip.
#DashboardCursorSync: *0 | 1 | 2 @cuetsy(kind="enum",memberNames="Off|Crosshair|Tooltip")
// Schema for panel targets is specified by datasource
// plugins. We use a placeholder definition, which the Go
// schema loader either left open/as-is with the Base
// variant of the Dashboard and Panel families, or filled
// with types derived from plugins in the Instance variant.
// When working directly from CUE, importers can extend this
// type directly to achieve the same effect.
#Target: {...}
// A dashboard snapshot shares an interactive dashboard publicly.
// It is a read-only version of a dashboard, and is not editable.
// It is possible to create a snapshot of a snapshot.
// Grafana strips away all sensitive information from the dashboard.
// Sensitive information stripped: queries (metric, template,annotation) and panel links.
#Snapshot: {
// Time when the snapshot was created
created: string & t.Time
// Time when the snapshot expires, default is never to expire
expires: string @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
// Is the snapshot saved in an external grafana instance
external: bool @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
// external url, if snapshot was shared in external grafana instance
externalUrl: string @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
// original url, url of the dashboard that was snapshotted
originalUrl: string @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
// Unique identifier of the snapshot
id: uint32 @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
// Optional, defined the unique key of the snapshot, required if external is true
key: string @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
// Optional, name of the snapshot
name: string @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
// org id of the snapshot
orgId: uint32 @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
// last time when the snapshot was updated
updated: string & t.Time
// url of the snapshot, if snapshot was shared internally
url?: string @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
// user id of the snapshot creator
userId: uint32 @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
} @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
// Dashboard panels are the basic visualization building blocks.
#Panel: {
// The panel plugin type id. This is used to find the plugin to display the panel.
type: string & strings.MinRunes(1)
// Unique identifier of the panel. Generated by Grafana when creating a new panel. It must be unique within a dashboard, but not globally.
id?: uint32
// The version of the plugin that is used for this panel. This is used to find the plugin to display the panel and to migrate old panel configs.
pluginVersion?: string
// Depends on the panel plugin. See the plugin documentation for details.
targets?: [...#Target]
// Panel title.
title?: string
// Panel description.
description?: string
// Whether to display the panel without a background.
transparent?: bool | *false
// The datasource used in all targets.
datasource?: #DataSourceRef
// Grid position.
gridPos?: #GridPos
// Panel links.
links?: [...#DashboardLink]
// Name of template variable to repeat for.
repeat?: string
// Direction to repeat in if 'repeat' is set.
// `h` for horizontal, `v` for vertical.
repeatDirection?: *"h" | "v"
// Option for repeated panels that controls max items per row
// Only relevant for horizontally repeated panels
maxPerRow?: number
// The maximum number of data points that the panel queries are retrieving.
maxDataPoints?: number
// List of transformations that are applied to the panel data before rendering.
// When there are multiple transformations, Grafana applies them in the order they are listed.
// Each transformation creates a result set that then passes on to the next transformation in the processing pipeline.
transformations?: [...#DataTransformerConfig]
// The min time interval setting defines a lower limit for the $__interval and $__interval_ms variables.
// This value must be formatted as a number followed by a valid time
// identifier like: "40s", "3d", etc.
// See: https://grafana.com/docs/grafana/latest/panels-visualizations/query-transform-data/#query-options
interval?: string
// Overrides the relative time range for individual panels,
// which causes them to be different than what is selected in
// the dashboard time picker in the top-right corner of the dashboard. You can use this to show metrics from different
// time periods or days on the same dashboard.
// The value is formatted as time operation like: `now-5m` (Last 5 minutes), `now/d` (the day so far),
// `now-5d/d`(Last 5 days), `now/w` (This week so far), `now-2y/y` (Last 2 years).
// Note: Panel time overrides have no effect when the dashboards time range is absolute.
// See: https://grafana.com/docs/grafana/latest/panels-visualizations/query-transform-data/#query-options
timeFrom?: string
// Overrides the time range for individual panels by shifting its start and end relative to the time picker.
// For example, you can shift the time range for the panel to be two hours earlier than the dashboard time picker setting `2h`.
// Note: Panel time overrides have no effect when the dashboards time range is absolute.
// See: https://grafana.com/docs/grafana/latest/panels-visualizations/query-transform-data/#query-options
timeShift?: string
// Controls if the timeFrom or timeShift overrides are shown in the panel header
hideTimeOverride?: bool
// Dynamically load the panel
libraryPanel?: #LibraryPanelRef
// Sets panel queries cache timeout.
cacheTimeout?: string
// Overrides the data source configured time-to-live for a query cache item in milliseconds
queryCachingTTL?: number
// It depends on the panel plugin. They are specified by the Options field in panel plugin schemas.
options?: {...} @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
// Field options allow you to change how the data is displayed in your visualizations.
fieldConfig?: #FieldConfigSource
} @cuetsy(kind="interface") @grafana(TSVeneer="type") @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
// The data model used in Grafana, namely the data frame, is a columnar-oriented table structure that unifies both time series and table query results.
// Each column within this structure is called a field. A field can represent a single time series or table column.
// Field options allow you to change how the data is displayed in your visualizations.
#FieldConfigSource: {
// Defaults are the options applied to all fields.
defaults: #FieldConfig
// Overrides are the options applied to specific fields overriding the defaults.
overrides: [...{
matcher: #MatcherConfig
properties: [...#DynamicConfigValue]
}] @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
} @cuetsy(kind="interface") @grafana(TSVeneer="type") @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
// A library panel is a reusable panel that you can use in any dashboard.
// When you make a change to a library panel, that change propagates to all instances of where the panel is used.
// Library panels streamline reuse of panels across multiple dashboards.
#LibraryPanelRef: {
// Library panel name
name: string
// Library panel uid
uid: string
} @cuetsy(kind="interface")
// Matcher is a predicate configuration. Based on the config a set of field(s) or values is filtered in order to apply override / transformation.
// It comes with in id ( to resolve implementation from registry) and a configuration thats specific to a particular matcher type.
#MatcherConfig: {
// The matcher id. This is used to find the matcher implementation from registry.
id: string | *"" @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
// The matcher options. This is specific to the matcher implementation.
options?: _ @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
} @cuetsy(kind="interface") @grafana(TSVeneer="type")
#DynamicConfigValue: {
id: string | *"" @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
value?: _ @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
}
// The data model used in Grafana, namely the data frame, is a columnar-oriented table structure that unifies both time series and table query results.
// Each column within this structure is called a field. A field can represent a single time series or table column.
// Field options allow you to change how the data is displayed in your visualizations.
#FieldConfig: {
// The display value for this field. This supports template variables blank is auto
displayName?: string @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
// This can be used by data sources that return and explicit naming structure for values and labels
// When this property is configured, this value is used rather than the default naming strategy.
displayNameFromDS?: string @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
// Human readable field metadata
description?: string @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
// An explicit path to the field in the datasource. When the frame meta includes a path,
// This will default to `${frame.meta.path}/${field.name}
//
// When defined, this value can be used as an identifier within the datasource scope, and
// may be used to update the results
path?: string @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
// True if data source can write a value to the path. Auth/authz are supported separately
writeable?: bool @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
// True if data source field supports ad-hoc filters
filterable?: bool @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
// Unit a field should use. The unit you select is applied to all fields except time.
// You can use the units ID availables in Grafana or a custom unit.
// Available units in Grafana: https://github.com/grafana/grafana/blob/main/packages/grafana-data/src/valueFormats/categories.ts
// As custom unit, you can use the following formats:
// `suffix:<suffix>` for custom unit that should go after value.
// `prefix:<prefix>` for custom unit that should go before value.
// `time:<format>` For custom date time formats type for example `time:YYYY-MM-DD`.
// `si:<base scale><unit characters>` for custom SI units. For example: `si: mF`. This one is a bit more advanced as you can specify both a unit and the source data scale. So if your source data is represented as milli (thousands of) something prefix the unit with that SI scale character.
// `count:<unit>` for a custom count unit.
// `currency:<unit>` for custom a currency unit.
unit?: string @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
// Specify the number of decimals Grafana includes in the rendered value.
// If you leave this field blank, Grafana automatically truncates the number of decimals based on the value.
// For example 1.1234 will display as 1.12 and 100.456 will display as 100.
// To display all decimals, set the unit to `String`.
decimals?: number @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
// The minimum value used in percentage threshold calculations. Leave blank for auto calculation based on all series and fields.
min?: number @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
// The maximum value used in percentage threshold calculations. Leave blank for auto calculation based on all series and fields.
max?: number @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
// Convert input values into a display string
mappings?: [...#ValueMapping] @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
// Map numeric values to states
thresholds?: #ThresholdsConfig @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
// Panel color configuration
color?: #FieldColor
// The behavior when clicking on a result
links?: [...] @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
// Alternative to empty string
noValue?: string @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
// custom is specified by the FieldConfig field
// in panel plugin schemas.
custom?: {...} @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
} @cuetsy(kind="interface") @grafana(TSVeneer="type") @grafanamaturity(NeedsExpertReview)
// Row panel
#RowPanel: {
// The panel type
type: "row"
// Whether this row should be collapsed or not.
collapsed: bool | *false
// Row title
title?: string
// Name of default datasource for the row
datasource?: #DataSourceRef
// Row grid position
gridPos?: #GridPos
// Unique identifier of the panel. Generated by Grafana when creating a new panel. It must be unique within a dashboard, but not globally.
id: uint32
// List of panels in the row
panels: [...#Panel]
// Name of template variable to repeat for.
repeat?: string
} @cuetsy(kind="interface") @grafana(TSVeneer="type")
}
},
]