InfluxDB.Client.Linq 4.16.0

There is a newer prerelease version of this package available.
See the version list below for details.
dotnet add package InfluxDB.Client.Linq --version 4.16.0
NuGet\Install-Package InfluxDB.Client.Linq -Version 4.16.0
This command is intended to be used within the Package Manager Console in Visual Studio, as it uses the NuGet module's version of Install-Package.
<PackageReference Include="InfluxDB.Client.Linq" Version="4.16.0" />
For projects that support PackageReference, copy this XML node into the project file to reference the package.
paket add InfluxDB.Client.Linq --version 4.16.0
#r "nuget: InfluxDB.Client.Linq, 4.16.0"
#r directive can be used in F# Interactive and Polyglot Notebooks. Copy this into the interactive tool or source code of the script to reference the package.
// Install InfluxDB.Client.Linq as a Cake Addin
#addin nuget:?package=InfluxDB.Client.Linq&version=4.16.0

// Install InfluxDB.Client.Linq as a Cake Tool
#tool nuget:?package=InfluxDB.Client.Linq&version=4.16.0

InfluxDB.Client.Linq

The library supports to use a LINQ expression to query the InfluxDB.

Documentation

This section contains links to the client library documentation.

Usage

How to start

First, add the library as a dependency for your project:

# For actual version please check: https://www.nuget.org/packages/InfluxDB.Client.Linq/

dotnet add package InfluxDB.Client.Linq --version 1.17.0-dev.linq.17

Next, you should add additional using statement to your program:

using InfluxDB.Client.Linq;

The LINQ query depends on QueryApiSync, you could create an instance of QueryApiSync by:

var client = new InfluxDBClient("http://localhost:8086", "my-token");
var queryApi = client.GetQueryApiSync();

In the following examples we assume that the Sensor entity is defined as:

class Sensor
{
    [Column("sensor_id", IsTag = true)] 
    public string SensorId { get; set; }

    /// <summary>
    /// "production" or "testing"
    /// </summary>
    [Column("deployment", IsTag = true)]
    public string Deployment { get; set; }

    /// <summary>
    /// Value measured by sensor
    /// </summary>
    [Column("data")]
    public float Value { get; set; }

    [Column(IsTimestamp = true)] 
    public DateTime Timestamp { get; set; }
}

Time Series

The InfluxDB uses concept of TimeSeries - a collection of data that shares a measurement, tag set, and bucket. You always operate on each time-series, if you querying data with Flux.

Imagine that you have following data:

sensor,deployment=production,sensor_id=id-1 data=15
sensor,deployment=testing,sensor_id=id-1 data=28
sensor,deployment=testing,sensor_id=id-1 data=12
sensor,deployment=production,sensor_id=id-1 data=89

The corresponding time series are:

  • sensor,deployment=production,sensor_id=id-1
  • sensor,deployment=testing,sensor_id=id-1

If you query your data with following Flux:

from(bucket: "my-bucket")
  |> range(start: 0)
  |> pivot(rowKey:["_time"], columnKey: ["_field"], valueColumn: "_value")
  |> drop(columns: ["_start", "_stop", "_measurement"])
  |> limit(n:1)

The result will be one item for each time-series:

sensor,deployment=production,sensor_id=id-1 data=15
sensor,deployment=testing,sensor_id=id-1 data=28

and this is also way how this LINQ driver works.

The driver supposes that you are querying over one time-series.

There is a way how to change this configuration:

Enable querying multiple time-series

var settings = new QueryableOptimizerSettings{QueryMultipleTimeSeries = true};
var query = from s in InfluxDBQueryable<Sensor>.Queryable("my-bucket", "my-org", _queryApi, settings)
    select s;

The group() function is way how to query multiple time-series and gets correct results.

The following query works correctly:

from(bucket: "my-bucket")
  |> range(start: 0)
  |> pivot(rowKey:["_time"], columnKey: ["_field"], valueColumn: "_value")
  |> drop(columns: ["_start", "_stop", "_measurement"])
  |> group()
  |> limit(n:1)

and corresponding result:

sensor,deployment=production,sensor_id=id-1 data=15

Do not used this functionality if it is not required because it brings a performance costs caused by sorting:

Group does not guarantee sort order

The group() does not guarantee sort order of output records. To ensure data is sorted correctly, use orderby expression.

Client Side Evaluation

The library attempts to evaluate a query on the server as much as possible. The client side evaluations is required for aggregation function if there is more then one time series.

If you want to count your data with following Flux:

from(bucket: "my-bucket")
  |> range(start: 0)
  |> drop(columns: ["_start", "_stop", "_measurement"])
  |> pivot(rowKey:["_time"], columnKey: ["_field"], valueColumn: "_value")
  |> stateCount(fn: (r) => true, column: "linq_result_column") 
  |> last(column: "linq_result_column") 
  |> keep(columns: ["linq_result_column"])

The result will be one count for each time-series:

#group,false,false,false
#datatype,string,long,long
#default,_result,,
,result,table,linq_result_column
,,0,1
,,0,1

and client has to aggregate this multiple results into one scalar value.

Operators that could cause client side evaluation:

  • Count
  • CountLong

TL;DR

Perform Query

The LINQ query requires bucket and organization as a source of data. Both of them could be name or ID.

var query = (from s in InfluxDBQueryable<Sensor>.Queryable("my-bucket", "my-org", queryApi)
    where s.SensorId == "id-1"
    where s.Value > 12
    where s.Timestamp > new DateTime(2019, 11, 16, 8, 20, 15, DateTimeKind.Utc)
    where s.Timestamp < new DateTime(2021, 01, 10, 5, 10, 0, DateTimeKind.Utc)
    orderby s.Timestamp
    select s)
    .Take(2)
    .Skip(2);

var sensors = query.ToList();

Flux Query:

from(bucket: "my-bucket") 
    |> range(start: 2019-11-16T08:20:15Z, stop: 2021-01-10T05:10:00Z) 
    |> filter(fn: (r) => (r["sensor_id"] == "id-1")) 
    |> pivot(rowKey:["_time"], columnKey: ["_field"], valueColumn: "_value")
    |> drop(columns: ["_start", "_stop", "_measurement"])
    |> filter(fn: (r) => (r["data"] > 12)) 
    |> limit(n: 2, offset: 2)

Filtering

The range() and filter() are pushdown functions that allow push their data manipulation down to the underlying data source rather than storing and manipulating data in memory. Using pushdown functions at the beginning of query we greatly reduce the amount of server memory necessary to run a query.

The LINQ provider needs to aligns fields within each input table that have the same timestamp to column-wise format:

From
_time _value _measurement _field
1970-01-01T00:00:00.000000001Z 1.0 "m1" "f1"
1970-01-01T00:00:00.000000001Z 2.0 "m1" "f2"
1970-01-01T00:00:00.000000002Z 3.0 "m1" "f1"
1970-01-01T00:00:00.000000002Z 4.0 "m1" "f2"
To
_time _measurement f1 f2
1970-01-01T00:00:00.000000001Z "m1" 1.0 2.0
1970-01-01T00:00:00.000000002Z "m1" 3.0 4.0

For that reason we need to use the pivot() function. The pivot is heavy and should be used at the end of our Flux query.

There is an also possibility to disable appending pivot by:

var optimizerSettings =
    new QueryableOptimizerSettings
    {
        AlignFieldsWithPivot = false
    };
    
var query = from s in InfluxDBQueryable<Sensor>.Queryable("my-bucket", "my-org", queryApi, optimizerSettings)
    select s;

Mapping LINQ filters

For the best performance on the both side - server, LINQ provider we maps the LINQ expressions to FLUX query following way:

Filter by Timestamp

Mapped to range().

var query = from s in InfluxDBQueryable<Sensor>.Queryable("my-bucket", "my-org", queryApi)
    where s.Timestamp >= new DateTime(2019, 11, 16, 8, 20, 15, DateTimeKind.Utc)
    select s;

var sensors = query.ToList();

Flux Query:

from(bucket: "my-bucket") 
    |> range(start: 2019-11-16T08:20:15ZZ) 
    |> pivot(rowKey:["_time"], columnKey: ["_field"], valueColumn: "_value")
    |> drop(columns: ["_start", "_stop", "_measurement"])
Filter by Tag

Mapped to filter() before pivot().

var query = from s in InfluxDBQueryable<Sensor>.Queryable("my-bucket", "my-org", queryApi)
    where s.SensorId == "id-1"
    select s;

Flux Query:

from(bucket: "my-bucket") 
    |> range(start: 0)
    |> filter(fn: (r) => (r["sensor_id"] == "id-1"))  
    |> pivot(rowKey:["_time"], columnKey: ["_field"], valueColumn: "_value")
    |> drop(columns: ["_start", "_stop", "_measurement"])
Filter by Field

The filter by field has to be after the pivot() because we want to select all fields from pivoted table.

var query = from s in InfluxDBQueryable<Sensor>.Queryable("my-bucket", "my-org", queryApi)
    where s.Value < 28
    select s;

Flux Query:

from(bucket: "my-bucket") 
    |> range(start: 0)
    |> pivot(rowKey:["_time"], columnKey: ["_field"], valueColumn: "_value")  
    |> drop(columns: ["_start", "_stop", "_measurement"])
    |> filter(fn: (r) => (r["data"] < 28))

If we move the filter() for fields before the pivot() then we will gets wrong results:

Data
m1 f1=1,f2=2 1
m1 f1=3,f2=4 2
Without filter
from(bucket: "my-bucket") 
    |> range(start: 0)
    |> pivot(rowKey:["_time"], columnKey: ["_field"], valueColumn: "_value") 
    |> drop(columns: ["_start", "_stop", "_measurement"])

Results:

_time f1 f2
1970-01-01T00:00:00.000000001Z 1.0 2.0
1970-01-01T00:00:00.000000002Z 3.0 4.0
Filter before pivot()

filter: f1 > 0

from(bucket: "my-bucket") 
    |> range(start: 0) 
    |> filter(fn: (r) => (r["_field"] == "f1" and r["_value"] > 0))
    |> pivot(rowKey:["_time"], columnKey: ["_field"], valueColumn: "_value") 
    |> drop(columns: ["_start", "_stop", "_measurement"])

Results:

_time f1
1970-01-01T00:00:00.000000001Z 1.0
1970-01-01T00:00:00.000000002Z 3.0

Time Range Filtering

The time filtering expressions are mapped to Flux range() function. This function has start and stop parameters with following behaviour: start <= _time < stop:

Results include records with _time values greater than or equal to the specified start time and less than the specified stop time.

This means that we have to add one nanosecond to start if we want timestamp greater than and also add one nanosecond to stop if we want to timestamp lesser or equal than.

Example 1:
var query = from s in InfluxDBQueryable<Sensor>.Queryable("my-bucket", "my-org", queryApi)
    where s.Timestamp > new DateTime(2019, 11, 16, 8, 20, 15, DateTimeKind.Utc)
    where s.Timestamp < new DateTime(2021, 01, 10, 5, 10, 0, DateTimeKind.Utc)
    select s;

var sensors = query.ToList();

Flux Query:

start_shifted = int(v: time(v: "2019-11-16T08:20:15Z")) + 1

from(bucket: "my-bucket") 
    |> range(start: time(v: start_shifted), stop: 2021-01-10T05:10:00Z)
    |> pivot(rowKey:["_time"], columnKey: ["_field"], valueColumn: "_value") 
    |> drop(columns: ["_start", "_stop", "_measurement"])
Example 2:
var query = from s in InfluxDBQueryable<Sensor>.Queryable("my-bucket", "my-org", queryApi)
    where s.Timestamp >= new DateTime(2019, 11, 16, 8, 20, 15, DateTimeKind.Utc)
    where s.Timestamp <= new DateTime(2021, 01, 10, 5, 10, 0, DateTimeKind.Utc)
    select s;

var sensors = query.ToList();

Flux Query:

stop_shifted = int(v: time(v: "2021-01-10T05:10:00Z")) + 1

from(bucket: "my-bucket") 
    |> range(start: 2019-11-16T08:20:15Z, stop: time(v: stop_shifted)) 
    |> pivot(rowKey:["_time"], columnKey: ["_field"], valueColumn: "_value")
    |> drop(columns: ["_start", "_stop", "_measurement"])
Example 3:
var query = from s in InfluxDBQueryable<Sensor>.Queryable("my-bucket", "my-org", queryApi)
    where s.Timestamp >= new DateTime(2019, 11, 16, 8, 20, 15, DateTimeKind.Utc)
    select s;

var sensors = query.ToList();

Flux Query:

from(bucket: "my-bucket") 
    |> range(start: 2019-11-16T08:20:15ZZ) 
    |> pivot(rowKey:["_time"], columnKey: ["_field"], valueColumn: "_value")
    |> drop(columns: ["_start", "_stop", "_measurement"])
Example 4:
var query = from s in InfluxDBQueryable<Sensor>.Queryable("my-bucket", "my-org", queryApi)
    where s.Timestamp <= new DateTime(2021, 01, 10, 5, 10, 0, DateTimeKind.Utc)
    select s;

var sensors = query.ToList();

Flux Query:

stop_shifted = int(v: time(v: "2021-01-10T05:10:00Z")) + 1

from(bucket: "my-bucket") 
    |> range(start: 0, stop: time(v: stop_shifted))
    |> pivot(rowKey:["_time"], columnKey: ["_field"], valueColumn: "_value") 
    |> drop(columns: ["_start", "_stop", "_measurement"])
Example 5:
var query = from s in InfluxDBQueryable<Sensor>.Queryable("my-bucket", "my-org", queryApi)
    where s.Timestamp == new DateTime(2019, 11, 16, 8, 20, 15, DateTimeKind.Utc)
    select s;

var sensors = query.ToList();

Flux Query:

stop_shifted = int(v: time(v: "2019-11-16T08:20:15Z")) + 1

from(bucket: "my-bucket") 
    |> range(start: 2019-11-16T08:20:15Z, stop: time(v: stop_shifted)) 
    |> pivot(rowKey:["_time"], columnKey: ["_field"], valueColumn: "_value")
    |> drop(columns: ["_start", "_stop", "_measurement"])

There is also a possibility to specify the default value for start and stop parameter. This is useful when you need to include data with future timestamps when no time bounds are explicitly set.

var settings = new QueryableOptimizerSettings
{
    RangeStartValue = DateTime.UtcNow.AddHours(-24),
    RangeStopValue = DateTime.UtcNow.AddHours(1)
};
var query = from s in InfluxDBQueryable<Sensor>.Queryable("my-bucket", "my-org", queryApi, settings)
    select s;

TD;LR

Supported LINQ operators

Equal

var query = from s in InfluxDBQueryable<Sensor>.Queryable("my-bucket", "my-org", queryApi)
    where s.SensorId == "id-1"
    select s;

Flux Query:

from(bucket: "my-bucket") 
    |> range(start: 0)
    |> filter(fn: (r) => (r["sensor_id"] == "id-1"))  
    |> pivot(rowKey:["_time"], columnKey: ["_field"], valueColumn: "_value")
    |> drop(columns: ["_start", "_stop", "_measurement"])

Not Equal

var query = from s in InfluxDBQueryable<Sensor>.Queryable("my-bucket", "my-org", queryApi)
    where s.SensorId != "id-1"
    select s;

Flux Query:

from(bucket: "my-bucket") 
    |> range(start: 0)
    |> filter(fn: (r) => (r["sensor_id"] != "id-1")) 
    |> pivot(rowKey:["_time"], columnKey: ["_field"], valueColumn: "_value")
    |> drop(columns: ["_start", "_stop", "_measurement"])

Less Than

var query = from s in InfluxDBQueryable<Sensor>.Queryable("my-bucket", "my-org", queryApi)
    where s.Value < 28
    select s;

Flux Query:

from(bucket: "my-bucket") 
    |> range(start: 0) 
    |> pivot(rowKey:["_time"], columnKey: ["_field"], valueColumn: "_value") 
    |> drop(columns: ["_start", "_stop", "_measurement"])
    |> filter(fn: (r) => (r["data"] < 28))

Less Than Or Equal

var query = from s in InfluxDBQueryable<Sensor>.Queryable("my-bucket", "my-org", queryApi)
    where s.Value <= 28
    select s;

Flux Query:

from(bucket: "my-bucket") 
    |> range(start: 0) 
    |> pivot(rowKey:["_time"], columnKey: ["_field"], valueColumn: "_value") 
    |> drop(columns: ["_start", "_stop", "_measurement"])
    |> filter(fn: (r) => (r["data"] <= 28))

Greater Than

var query = from s in InfluxDBQueryable<Sensor>.Queryable("my-bucket", "my-org", queryApi)
    where s.Value > 28
    select s;

Flux Query:

from(bucket: "my-bucket") 
    |> range(start: 0) 
    |> pivot(rowKey:["_time"], columnKey: ["_field"], valueColumn: "_value")
    |> drop(columns: ["_start", "_stop", "_measurement"])
    |> filter(fn: (r) => (r["data"] > 28))

Greater Than Or Equal

var query = from s in InfluxDBQueryable<Sensor>.Queryable("my-bucket", "my-org", queryApi)
    where s.Value >= 28
    select s;

Flux Query:

from(bucket: "my-bucket") 
    |> range(start: 0) 
    |> pivot(rowKey:["_time"], columnKey: ["_field"], valueColumn: "_value") 
    |> drop(columns: ["_start", "_stop", "_measurement"])
    |> filter(fn: (r) => (r["data"] >= 28))

And

var query = from s in InfluxDBQueryable<Sensor>.Queryable("my-bucket", "my-org", queryApi)
    where s.Value >= 28 && s.SensorId != "id-1"
    select s;

Flux Query:

from(bucket: "my-bucket") 
    |> range(start: 0) 
    |> filter(fn: (r) => (r["sensor_id"] != "id-1"))
    |> pivot(rowKey:["_time"], columnKey: ["_field"], valueColumn: "_value") 
    |> drop(columns: ["_start", "_stop", "_measurement"])
    |> filter(fn: (r) => (r["data"] >= 28))

Or

var query = from s in InfluxDBQueryable<Sensor>.Queryable("my-bucket", "my-org", queryApi)
    where s.Value >= 28 || s.Value <= 5
    select s;

Flux Query:

from(bucket: "my-bucket") 
    |> range(start: 0) 
    |> pivot(rowKey:["_time"], columnKey: ["_field"], valueColumn: "_value") 
    |> drop(columns: ["_start", "_stop", "_measurement"])
    |> filter(fn: (r) => ((r["data"] >= 28) or (r["data"] <=> 28)))

Any

The following code demonstrates how to use the Any operator to determine whether a collection contains any elements. By default the InfluxDB.Client doesn't supports to store a subcollection in your DomainObject.

Imagine that you have following entities:

class SensorCustom
{
    public Guid Id { get; set; }
    
    public float Data { get; set; }
    
    public DateTimeOffset Time { get; set; }
    
    public virtual ICollection<SensorAttribute> Attributes { get; set; }
}

class SensorAttribute
{
    public string Name { get; set; }
    public string Value { get; set; }
}

To be able to store SensorCustom entity in InfluxDB and retrieve it from database you should implement IDomainObjectMapper. The converter tells to the Client how to map DomainObject into PointData and how to map FluxRecord to DomainObject.

Entity Converter:

private class SensorEntityConverter : IDomainObjectMapper
{
    //
    // Parse incoming FluxRecord to DomainObject
    //
    public T ConvertToEntity<T>(FluxRecord fluxRecord)
    {
        if (typeof(T) != typeof(SensorCustom))
        {
            throw new NotSupportedException($"This converter doesn't supports: {typeof(SensorCustom)}");
        }

        //
        // Create SensorCustom entity and parse `SeriesId`, `Value` and `Time`
        //
        var customEntity = new SensorCustom
        {
            Id = Guid.Parse(Convert.ToString(fluxRecord.GetValueByKey("series_id"))!),
            Data = Convert.ToDouble(fluxRecord.GetValueByKey("data")),
            Time = fluxRecord.GetTime().GetValueOrDefault().ToDateTimeUtc(),
            Attributes = new List<SensorAttribute>()
        };
        
        foreach (var (key, value) in fluxRecord.Values)
        {
            //
            // Parse SubCollection values
            //
            if (key.StartsWith("property_"))
            {
                var attribute = new SensorAttribute
                {
                    Name = key.Replace("property_", string.Empty), Value = Convert.ToString(value)
                };
                
                customEntity.Attributes.Add(attribute);
            }
        }

        return (T) Convert.ChangeType(customEntity, typeof(T));
    }

    //
    // Convert DomainObject into PointData
    //
    public PointData ConvertToPointData<T>(T entity, WritePrecision precision)
    {
        if (!(entity is SensorCustom ce))
        {
            throw new NotSupportedException($"This converter doesn't supports: {typeof(SensorCustom)}");
        }

        //
        // Map `SeriesId`, `Value` and `Time` to Tag, Field and Timestamp
        //
        var point = PointData
            .Measurement("custom_measurement")
            .Tag("series_id", ce.Id.ToString())
            .Field("data", ce.Data)
            .Timestamp(ce.Time, precision);

        //
        // Map subattributes to Fields
        //
        foreach (var attribute in ce.Attributes ?? new List<SensorAttribute>())
        {
            point = point.Field($"property_{attribute.Name}", attribute.Value);
        }

        return point;
    }
}

The Converter could be passed to QueryApiSync, QueryApi or WriteApi by:

// Create Converter
var converter = new SensorEntityConverter();

// Get Query and Write API
var queryApi = client.GetQueryApiSync(converter);
var writeApi = client.GetWriteApi(converter);

The LINQ provider needs to know how properties of DomainObject are stored in InfluxDB - their name and type (tag, field, timestamp).

If you use a IDomainObjectMapper instead of InfluxDB Attributes you should implement IMemberNameResolver:

private class SensorMemberResolver: IMemberNameResolver
{
    //
    // Tell to LINQ providers how is property of DomainObject mapped - Tag, Field, Timestamp, ... ?
    //
    public MemberType ResolveMemberType(MemberInfo memberInfo)
    {
        //
        // Mapping of subcollection
        //
        if (memberInfo.DeclaringType == typeof(SensorAttribute))
        {
            return memberInfo.Name switch
            {
                "Name" => MemberType.NamedField,
                "Value" => MemberType.NamedFieldValue,
                _ => MemberType.Field
            };
        }

        //
        // Mapping of "root" domain
        //
        return memberInfo.Name switch
        {
            "Time" => MemberType.Timestamp,
            "Id" => MemberType.Tag,
            _ => MemberType.Field
        };
    }

    //
    // Tell to LINQ provider how is property of DomainObject named 
    //
    public string GetColumnName(MemberInfo memberInfo)
    {
        return memberInfo.Name switch
        {
            "Id" => "series_id",
            "Data" => "data",
            _ => memberInfo.Name
        };
    }

    //
    // Tell to LINQ provider how is named property that is flattened
    //
    public string GetNamedFieldName(MemberInfo memberInfo, object value)
    {
        return "attribute_" + Convert.ToString(value);
    }
}

Now We are able to provide a required information to the LINQ provider by memberResolver parameter:

var memberResolver = new SensorMemberResolver();

var query = from s in InfluxDBQueryable<SensorCustom>.Queryable("my-bucket", "my-org", queryApi, memberResolver)
    where s.Attributes.Any(a => a.Name == "quality" && a.Value == "good")
    select s;

Flux Query:

from(bucket: "my-bucket")
    |> range(start: 0)
    |> pivot(rowKey:["_time"], columnKey: ["_field"], valueColumn: "_value") 
    |> drop(columns: ["_start", "_stop", "_measurement"])
    |> filter(fn: (r) => (r["attribute_quality"] == "good"))

For more info see CustomDomainMappingAndLinq example.

Take

var query = (from s in InfluxDBQueryable<Sensor>.Queryable("my-bucket", "my-org", queryApi)
    select s)
    .Take(10);

Flux Query:

from(bucket: "my-bucket") 
    |> range(start: 0) 
    |> pivot(rowKey:["_time"], columnKey: ["_field"], valueColumn: "_value") 
    |> drop(columns: ["_start", "_stop", "_measurement"])
    |> limit(n: 10)

Note: the limit() function can be align before pivot() function by:

var optimizerSettings =
    new QueryableOptimizerSettings
    {
        AlignLimitFunctionAfterPivot = false
    };

Performance: The pivot() is a “heavy” function. Using limit() before pivot() is much faster but works only if you have consistent data series. See #318 for more details.

TakeLast

var query = (from s in InfluxDBQueryable<Sensor>.Queryable("my-bucket", "my-org", queryApi)
    select s)
    .TakeLast(10);

Flux Query:

from(bucket: "my-bucket") 
    |> range(start: 0) 
    |> pivot(rowKey:["_time"], columnKey: ["_field"], valueColumn: "_value") 
    |> drop(columns: ["_start", "_stop", "_measurement"])
    |> tail(n: 10)

Note: the tail() function can be align before pivot() function by:

var optimizerSettings =
    new QueryableOptimizerSettings
    {
        AlignLimitFunctionAfterPivot = false
    };

Performance: The pivot() is a “heavy” function. Using tail() before pivot() is much faster but works only if you have consistent data series. See #318 for more details.

Skip

var query = (from s in InfluxDBQueryable<Sensor>.Queryable("my-bucket", "my-org", queryApi)
    select s)
    .Take(10)
    .Skip(50);

Flux Query:

from(bucket: "my-bucket") 
    |> range(start: 0) 
    |> pivot(rowKey:["_time"], columnKey: ["_field"], valueColumn: "_value") 
    |> drop(columns: ["_start", "_stop", "_measurement"])
    |> limit(n: 10, offset: 50)

OrderBy

Example 1:
var query = from s in InfluxDBQueryable<Sensor>.Queryable("my-bucket", "my-org", queryApi)
    orderby s.Deployment
    select s;

Flux Query:

from(bucket: "my-bucket") 
    |> range(start: 0) 
    |> pivot(rowKey:["_time"], columnKey: ["_field"], valueColumn: "_value") 
    |> drop(columns: ["_start", "_stop", "_measurement"])
    |> sort(columns: ["deployment"], desc: false)
Example 2:
var query = from s in InfluxDBQueryable<Sensor>.Queryable("my-bucket", "my-org", queryApi)
    orderby s.Timestamp descending 
    select s;

Flux Query:

from(bucket: "my-bucket") 
    |> range(start: 0) 
    |> pivot(rowKey:["_time"], columnKey: ["_field"], valueColumn: "_value") 
    |> drop(columns: ["_start", "_stop", "_measurement"])
    |> sort(columns: ["_time"], desc: true)

Count

Possibility of partial client side evaluation

var query = from s in InfluxDBQueryable<Sensor>.Queryable("my-bucket", "my-org", queryApi)
    select s;

var sensors = query.Count();

Flux Query:

from(bucket: "my-bucket") 
    |> range(start: 0) 
    |> pivot(rowKey:["_time"], columnKey: ["_field"], valueColumn: "_value") 
    |> drop(columns: ["_start", "_stop", "_measurement"])
    |> stateCount(fn: (r) => true, column: "linq_result_column") 
    |> last(column: "linq_result_column") 
    |> keep(columns: ["linq_result_column"])

LongCount

Possibility of partial client side evaluation

var query = from s in InfluxDBQueryable<Sensor>.Queryable("my-bucket", "my-org", queryApi)
    select s;

var sensors = query.LongCount();

Flux Query:

from(bucket: "my-bucket") 
    |> range(start: 0)
    |> pivot(rowKey:["_time"], columnKey: ["_field"], valueColumn: "_value") 
    |> drop(columns: ["_start", "_stop", "_measurement"])
    |> stateCount(fn: (r) => true, column: "linq_result_column") 
    |> last(column: "linq_result_column") 
    |> keep(columns: ["linq_result_column"])

Contains

int[] values = {15, 28};

var query = from s in InfluxDBQueryable<Sensor>.Queryable("my-bucket", "my-org", queryApi)
    where values.Contains(s.Value)
    select s;

var sensors = query.Count();

Flux Query:

from(bucket: "my-bucket")
    |> range(start: 0)
    |> pivot(rowKey:["_time"], columnKey: ["_field"], valueColumn: "_value")
    |> drop(columns: ["_start", "_stop", "_measurement"])
    |> filter(fn: (r) => contains(value: r["data"], set: [15, 28]))

Custom LINQ operators

AggregateWindow

The AggregateWindow applies an aggregate function to fixed windows of time. Can be used only for a field which is defined as timestamp - [Column(IsTimestamp = true)]. For more info about aggregateWindow() function see Flux's documentation - https://docs.influxdata.com/flux/v0.x/stdlib/universe/aggregatewindow/.

var query = from s in InfluxDBQueryable<Sensor>.Queryable("my-bucket", "my-org", queryApi)
    where s.Timestamp.AggregateWindow(TimeSpan.FromSeconds(20), TimeSpan.FromSeconds(40), "mean")
    select s;

Flux Query:

from(bucket: "my-bucket") 
    |> range(start: 0) 
    |> aggregateWindow(every: 20s, period: 40s, fn: mean) 
    |> pivot(rowKey:["_time"], columnKey: ["_field"], valueColumn: "_value") 
    |> drop(columns: ["_start", "_stop", "_measurement"])

Domain Converter

There is also possibility to use custom domain converter to transform data from/to your DomainObject.

Instead of following Influx attributes:

[Measurement("temperature")]
private class Temperature
{
    [Column("location", IsTag = true)] public string Location { get; set; }

    [Column("value")] public double Value { get; set; }

    [Column(IsTimestamp = true)] public DateTime Time { get; set; }
}

you could create own instance of IDomainObjectMapper and use it with QueryApiSync, QueryApi and WriteApi.

var converter = new DomainEntityConverter();
var queryApi = client.GetQueryApiSync(converter)

To satisfy LINQ Query Provider you have to implement IMemberNameResolver:

var resolver = new MemberNameResolver();

var query = from s in InfluxDBQueryable<SensorCustom>.Queryable("my-bucket", "my-org", queryApi, nameResolver)
    where s.Attributes.Any(a => a.Name == "quality" && a.Value == "good")
    select s;

for more details see Any operator and for full example see: CustomDomainMappingAndLinq.

How to debug output Flux Query

var query = (from s in InfluxDBQueryable<Sensor>.Queryable("my-bucket", "my-org", _queryApi)
        where s.SensorId == "id-1"
        where s.Value > 12
        where s.Timestamp > new DateTime(2019, 11, 16, 8, 20, 15, DateTimeKind.Utc)
        where s.Timestamp < new DateTime(2021, 01, 10, 5, 10, 0, DateTimeKind.Utc)
        orderby s.Timestamp
        select s)
    .Take(2)
    .Skip(2);
    
Console.WriteLine("==== Debug LINQ Queryable Flux output ====");
var influxQuery = ((InfluxDBQueryable<Sensor>) query).ToDebugQuery();
foreach (var statement in influxQuery.Extern.Body)
{
    var os = statement as OptionStatement;
    var va = os?.Assignment as VariableAssignment;
    var name = va?.Id.Name;
    var value = va?.Init.GetType().GetProperty("Value")?.GetValue(va.Init, null);

    Console.WriteLine($"{name}={value}");
}
Console.WriteLine();
Console.WriteLine(influxQuery._Query);

How to filter by Measurement

By default, as an optimization step, Flux queries generated by LINQ will automatically drop the Start, Stop and Measurement columns:

from(bucket: "my-bucket")
  |> range(start: 0)
  |> drop(columns: ["_start", "_stop", "_measurement"])
  ...

This is because typical POCO classes do not include them:

[Measurement("temperature")]
private class Temperature
{
    [Column("location", IsTag = true)] public string Location { get; set; }
    [Column("value")] public double Value { get; set; }
    [Column(IsTimestamp = true)] public DateTime Time { get; set; }
}

It is, however, possible to utilize the Measurement column in LINQ queries by enabling it in the query optimization settings:

var optimizerSettings =
    new QueryableOptimizerSettings
    {
        DropMeasurementColumn = false,
        
        // Note we can also enable the start and stop columns
        //DropStartColumn = false,
        //DropStopColumn = false
    };

var queryable =
    new InfluxDBQueryable<InfluxPoint>("my-bucket", "my-org", queryApi, new DefaultMemberNameResolver(), optimizerSettings);

var latest =
    await queryable.Where(p => p.Measurement == "temperature")
                   .OrderByDescending(p => p.Time)
                   .ToInfluxQueryable()
                   .GetAsyncEnumerator()
                   .FirstOrDefaultAsync();

private class InfluxPoint
{
    [Column(IsMeasurement = true)] public string Measurement { get; set; }
    [Column("location", IsTag = true)] public string Location { get; set; }
    [Column("value")] public double Value { get; set; }
    [Column(IsTimestamp = true)] public DateTime Time { get; set; }
}

Asynchronous Queries

The LINQ driver also supports asynchronous querying. For asynchronous queries you have to initialize InfluxDBQueryable with asynchronous version of QueryApi and transform IQueryable<T> to IAsyncEnumerable<T>:

var client = new InfluxDBClient("http://localhost:8086", "my-token");
var queryApi = client.GetQueryApi();

var query = from s in InfluxDBQueryable<Sensor>.Queryable("my-bucket", "my-org", queryApi)
    select s;

IAsyncEnumerable<Sensor> enumerable = query
    .ToInfluxQueryable()
    .GetAsyncEnumerator();
Product Compatible and additional computed target framework versions.
.NET net5.0 was computed.  net5.0-windows was computed.  net6.0 was computed.  net6.0-android was computed.  net6.0-ios was computed.  net6.0-maccatalyst was computed.  net6.0-macos was computed.  net6.0-tvos was computed.  net6.0-windows was computed.  net7.0 was computed.  net7.0-android was computed.  net7.0-ios was computed.  net7.0-maccatalyst was computed.  net7.0-macos was computed.  net7.0-tvos was computed.  net7.0-windows was computed.  net8.0 was computed.  net8.0-android was computed.  net8.0-browser was computed.  net8.0-ios was computed.  net8.0-maccatalyst was computed.  net8.0-macos was computed.  net8.0-tvos was computed.  net8.0-windows was computed. 
.NET Core netcoreapp2.0 was computed.  netcoreapp2.1 was computed.  netcoreapp2.2 was computed.  netcoreapp3.0 was computed.  netcoreapp3.1 was computed. 
.NET Standard netstandard2.0 is compatible.  netstandard2.1 is compatible. 
.NET Framework net461 was computed.  net462 was computed.  net463 was computed.  net47 was computed.  net471 was computed.  net472 was computed.  net48 was computed.  net481 was computed. 
MonoAndroid monoandroid was computed. 
MonoMac monomac was computed. 
MonoTouch monotouch was computed. 
Tizen tizen40 was computed.  tizen60 was computed. 
Xamarin.iOS xamarinios was computed. 
Xamarin.Mac xamarinmac was computed. 
Xamarin.TVOS xamarintvos was computed. 
Xamarin.WatchOS xamarinwatchos was computed. 
Compatible target framework(s)
Included target framework(s) (in package)
Learn more about Target Frameworks and .NET Standard.

NuGet packages (4)

Showing the top 4 NuGet packages that depend on InfluxDB.Client.Linq:

Package Downloads
SpmisNet.Data

Package Description

DeerNet.InfluxDb2

Package Description

MicroHeart.InfluxDB

Package Description

ToolNET.InfluxDB.SDK

时序数据库InfluxDB操作SDK

GitHub repositories

This package is not used by any popular GitHub repositories.

Version Downloads Last updated
4.17.0-dev.14044 32 6/24/2024
4.16.0 119 6/24/2024
4.16.0-dev.13990 46 6/3/2024
4.16.0-dev.13973 34 6/3/2024
4.16.0-dev.13972 35 6/3/2024
4.16.0-dev.13963 45 6/3/2024
4.16.0-dev.13962 40 6/3/2024
4.16.0-dev.13881 40 6/3/2024
4.16.0-dev.13775 54 5/17/2024
4.16.0-dev.13702 47 5/17/2024
4.15.0 1,129 5/17/2024
4.15.0-dev.13674 49 5/14/2024
4.15.0-dev.13567 64 4/2/2024
4.15.0-dev.13558 45 4/2/2024
4.15.0-dev.13525 48 4/2/2024
4.15.0-dev.13524 45 4/2/2024
4.15.0-dev.13433 52 3/7/2024
4.15.0-dev.13432 50 3/7/2024
4.15.0-dev.13407 54 3/7/2024
4.15.0-dev.13390 50 3/7/2024
4.15.0-dev.13388 43 3/7/2024
4.15.0-dev.13282 50 3/6/2024
4.15.0-dev.13257 48 3/6/2024
4.15.0-dev.13113 210 2/1/2024
4.15.0-dev.13104 45 2/1/2024
4.15.0-dev.13081 46 2/1/2024
4.15.0-dev.13040 47 2/1/2024
4.15.0-dev.13039 46 2/1/2024
4.15.0-dev.12863 93 1/8/2024
4.15.0-dev.12846 65 1/8/2024
4.15.0-dev.12837 54 1/8/2024
4.15.0-dev.12726 134 12/1/2023
4.15.0-dev.12725 56 12/1/2023
4.15.0-dev.12724 55 12/1/2023
4.15.0-dev.12691 64 12/1/2023
4.15.0-dev.12658 57 12/1/2023
4.15.0-dev.12649 63 12/1/2023
4.15.0-dev.12624 59 12/1/2023
4.15.0-dev.12471 85 11/7/2023
4.15.0-dev.12462 55 11/7/2023
4.14.0 31,265 11/7/2023
4.14.0-dev.12437 57 11/7/2023
4.14.0-dev.12343 68 11/2/2023
4.14.0-dev.12310 58 11/2/2023
4.14.0-dev.12284 58 11/1/2023
4.14.0-dev.12235 60 11/1/2023
4.14.0-dev.12226 60 11/1/2023
4.14.0-dev.11972 189 8/8/2023
4.14.0-dev.11915 92 7/31/2023
4.14.0-dev.11879 100 7/28/2023
4.13.0 19,649 7/28/2023
4.13.0-dev.11854 80 7/28/2023
4.13.0-dev.11814 90 7/21/2023
4.13.0-dev.11771 82 7/19/2023
4.13.0-dev.11770 80 7/19/2023
4.13.0-dev.11728 77 7/18/2023
4.13.0-dev.11686 75 7/17/2023
4.13.0-dev.11685 74 7/17/2023
4.13.0-dev.11676 85 7/17/2023
4.13.0-dev.11479 71 6/27/2023
4.13.0-dev.11478 77 6/27/2023
4.13.0-dev.11477 71 6/27/2023
4.13.0-dev.11396 85 6/19/2023
4.13.0-dev.11395 70 6/19/2023
4.13.0-dev.11342 78 6/15/2023
4.13.0-dev.11330 83 6/12/2023
4.13.0-dev.11305 82 6/12/2023
4.13.0-dev.11296 76 6/12/2023
4.13.0-dev.11217 78 6/6/2023
4.13.0-dev.11089 78 5/30/2023
4.13.0-dev.11064 81 5/30/2023
4.13.0-dev.10998 73 5/29/2023
4.13.0-dev.10989 79 5/29/2023
4.13.0-dev.10871 78 5/8/2023
4.13.0-dev.10870 69 5/8/2023
4.13.0-dev.10819 97 4/28/2023
4.12.0 11,062 4/28/2023
4.12.0-dev.10777 79 4/27/2023
4.12.0-dev.10768 90 4/27/2023
4.12.0-dev.10759 90 4/27/2023
4.12.0-dev.10742 77 4/27/2023
4.12.0-dev.10685 76 4/27/2023
4.12.0-dev.10684 80 4/27/2023
4.12.0-dev.10643 76 4/27/2023
4.12.0-dev.10642 76 4/27/2023
4.12.0-dev.10569 77 4/27/2023
4.12.0-dev.10193 115 2/23/2023
4.11.0 17,960 2/23/2023
4.11.0-dev.10176 94 2/23/2023
4.11.0-dev.10059 199 1/26/2023
4.10.0 5,222 1/26/2023
4.10.0-dev.10033 112 1/25/2023
4.10.0-dev.10032 110 1/25/2023
4.10.0-dev.10031 111 1/25/2023
4.10.0-dev.9936 2,172 12/26/2022
4.10.0-dev.9935 106 12/26/2022
4.10.0-dev.9881 100 12/21/2022
4.10.0-dev.9880 98 12/21/2022
4.10.0-dev.9818 101 12/16/2022
4.10.0-dev.9773 96 12/12/2022
4.10.0-dev.9756 97 12/12/2022
4.10.0-dev.9693 93 12/6/2022
4.9.0 8,711 12/6/2022
4.9.0-dev.9684 95 12/6/2022
4.9.0-dev.9666 100 12/6/2022
4.9.0-dev.9617 95 12/6/2022
4.9.0-dev.9478 94 12/5/2022
4.9.0-dev.9469 111 12/5/2022
4.9.0-dev.9444 87 12/5/2022
4.9.0-dev.9411 88 12/5/2022
4.9.0-dev.9350 99 12/1/2022
4.8.0 1,565 12/1/2022
4.8.0-dev.9324 94 11/30/2022
4.8.0-dev.9232 98 11/28/2022
4.8.0-dev.9223 99 11/28/2022
4.8.0-dev.9222 102 11/28/2022
4.8.0-dev.9117 114 11/21/2022
4.8.0-dev.9108 98 11/21/2022
4.8.0-dev.9099 99 11/21/2022
4.8.0-dev.9029 100 11/16/2022
4.8.0-dev.8971 99 11/15/2022
4.8.0-dev.8961 103 11/14/2022
4.8.0-dev.8928 102 11/14/2022
4.8.0-dev.8899 112 11/14/2022
4.8.0-dev.8898 100 11/14/2022
4.8.0-dev.8839 117 11/14/2022
4.8.0-dev.8740 96 11/7/2022
4.8.0-dev.8725 101 11/7/2022
4.8.0-dev.8648 94 11/3/2022
4.7.0 23,166 11/3/2022
4.7.0-dev.8625 108 11/2/2022
4.7.0-dev.8594 108 10/31/2022
4.7.0-dev.8579 102 10/31/2022
4.7.0-dev.8557 97 10/31/2022
4.7.0-dev.8540 92 10/31/2022
4.7.0-dev.8518 96 10/31/2022
4.7.0-dev.8517 101 10/31/2022
4.7.0-dev.8509 97 10/31/2022
4.7.0-dev.8377 101 10/26/2022
4.7.0-dev.8360 109 10/25/2022
4.7.0-dev.8350 106 10/24/2022
4.7.0-dev.8335 105 10/24/2022
4.7.0-dev.8334 105 10/24/2022
4.7.0-dev.8223 145 10/19/2022
4.7.0-dev.8178 99 10/17/2022
4.7.0-dev.8170 104 10/17/2022
4.7.0-dev.8148 105 10/17/2022
4.7.0-dev.8133 103 10/17/2022
4.7.0-dev.8097 97 10/17/2022
4.7.0-dev.8034 109 10/11/2022
4.7.0-dev.8025 103 10/11/2022
4.7.0-dev.8009 115 10/10/2022
4.7.0-dev.8001 114 10/10/2022
4.7.0-dev.7959 104 10/4/2022
4.7.0-dev.7905 101 9/30/2022
4.7.0-dev.7875 99 9/29/2022
4.6.0 2,637 9/29/2022
4.6.0-dev.7832 113 9/29/2022
4.6.0-dev.7817 112 9/29/2022
4.6.0-dev.7779 121 9/27/2022
4.6.0-dev.7778 117 9/27/2022
4.6.0-dev.7734 108 9/26/2022
4.6.0-dev.7733 108 9/26/2022
4.6.0-dev.7677 115 9/20/2022
4.6.0-dev.7650 115 9/16/2022
4.6.0-dev.7626 170 9/14/2022
4.6.0-dev.7618 167 9/14/2022
4.6.0-dev.7574 101 9/13/2022
4.6.0-dev.7572 100 9/13/2022
4.6.0-dev.7528 98 9/12/2022
4.6.0-dev.7502 113 9/9/2022
4.6.0-dev.7479 126 9/8/2022
4.6.0-dev.7471 117 9/8/2022
4.6.0-dev.7447 103 9/7/2022
4.6.0-dev.7425 102 9/7/2022
4.6.0-dev.7395 96 9/6/2022
4.6.0-dev.7344 108 8/31/2022
4.6.0-dev.7329 95 8/31/2022
4.6.0-dev.7292 93 8/30/2022
4.6.0-dev.7240 109 8/29/2022
4.5.0 2,318 8/29/2022
4.5.0-dev.7216 105 8/27/2022
4.5.0-dev.7147 109 8/22/2022
4.5.0-dev.7134 103 8/17/2022
4.5.0-dev.7096 109 8/15/2022
4.5.0-dev.7070 115 8/11/2022
4.5.0-dev.7040 135 8/10/2022
4.5.0-dev.7011 119 8/3/2022
4.5.0-dev.6987 117 8/1/2022
4.5.0-dev.6962 126 7/29/2022
4.4.0 14,637 7/29/2022
4.4.0-dev.6901 117 7/25/2022
4.4.0-dev.6843 112 7/19/2022
4.4.0-dev.6804 113 7/19/2022
4.4.0-dev.6789 115 7/19/2022
4.4.0-dev.6760 109 7/19/2022
4.4.0-dev.6705 124 7/14/2022
4.4.0-dev.6663 149 6/24/2022
4.4.0-dev.6655 113 6/24/2022
4.3.0 7,569 6/24/2022
4.3.0-dev.multiple.buckets3 144 6/21/2022
4.3.0-dev.multiple.buckets2 103 6/17/2022
4.3.0-dev.multiple.buckets1 110 6/17/2022
4.3.0-dev.6631 110 6/22/2022
4.3.0-dev.6623 119 6/22/2022
4.3.0-dev.6374 115 6/13/2022
4.3.0-dev.6286 117 5/20/2022
4.2.0 2,370 5/20/2022
4.2.0-dev.6257 125 5/13/2022
4.2.0-dev.6248 117 5/12/2022
4.2.0-dev.6233 121 5/12/2022
4.2.0-dev.6194 119 5/10/2022
4.2.0-dev.6193 113 5/10/2022
4.2.0-dev.6158 2,826 5/6/2022
4.2.0-dev.6135 123 5/6/2022
4.2.0-dev.6091 124 4/28/2022
4.2.0-dev.6048 124 4/28/2022
4.2.0-dev.6047 124 4/28/2022
4.2.0-dev.5966 132 4/25/2022
4.2.0-dev.5938 127 4/19/2022
4.1.0 3,365 4/19/2022
4.1.0-dev.5910 322 4/13/2022
4.1.0-dev.5888 124 4/13/2022
4.1.0-dev.5887 133 4/13/2022
4.1.0-dev.5794 135 4/6/2022
4.1.0-dev.5725 139 3/18/2022
4.0.0 6,416 3/18/2022
4.0.0-rc3 367 3/4/2022
4.0.0-rc2 521 2/25/2022
4.0.0-rc1 175 2/18/2022
4.0.0-dev.5709 126 3/18/2022
4.0.0-dev.5684 136 3/15/2022
4.0.0-dev.5630 143 3/4/2022
4.0.0-dev.5607 129 3/3/2022
4.0.0-dev.5579 131 2/25/2022
4.0.0-dev.5556 136 2/24/2022
4.0.0-dev.5555 130 2/24/2022
4.0.0-dev.5497 129 2/23/2022
4.0.0-dev.5489 135 2/23/2022
4.0.0-dev.5460 130 2/23/2022
4.0.0-dev.5444 131 2/22/2022
4.0.0-dev.5333 129 2/17/2022
4.0.0-dev.5303 127 2/16/2022
4.0.0-dev.5280 134 2/16/2022
4.0.0-dev.5279 134 2/16/2022
4.0.0-dev.5241 231 2/15/2022
4.0.0-dev.5225 131 2/15/2022
4.0.0-dev.5217 129 2/15/2022
4.0.0-dev.5209 128 2/15/2022
4.0.0-dev.5200 126 2/14/2022
4.0.0-dev.5188 127 2/10/2022
4.0.0-dev.5180 127 2/10/2022
4.0.0-dev.5172 129 2/10/2022
4.0.0-dev.5130 127 2/10/2022
4.0.0-dev.5122 133 2/9/2022
4.0.0-dev.5103 135 2/9/2022
4.0.0-dev.5097 139 2/9/2022
4.0.0-dev.5091 126 2/9/2022
4.0.0-dev.5084 130 2/8/2022
3.4.0-dev.5263 140 2/15/2022
3.4.0-dev.4986 135 2/7/2022
3.4.0-dev.4968 148 2/4/2022
3.3.0 8,497 2/4/2022
3.3.0-dev.4889 134 2/3/2022
3.3.0-dev.4865 137 2/1/2022
3.3.0-dev.4823 149 1/19/2022
3.3.0-dev.4691 141 1/7/2022
3.3.0-dev.4557 1,359 11/26/2021
3.2.0 5,811 11/26/2021
3.2.0-dev.4533 4,848 11/24/2021
3.2.0-dev.4484 210 11/11/2021
3.2.0-dev.4475 182 11/10/2021
3.2.0-dev.4387 162 10/26/2021
3.2.0-dev.4363 172 10/22/2021
3.2.0-dev.4356 177 10/22/2021
3.1.0 1,757 10/22/2021
3.1.0-dev.4303 172 10/18/2021
3.1.0-dev.4293 178 10/15/2021
3.1.0-dev.4286 157 10/15/2021
3.1.0-dev.4240 188 10/12/2021
3.1.0-dev.4202 152 10/11/2021
3.1.0-dev.4183 190 10/11/2021
3.1.0-dev.4131 156 10/8/2021
3.1.0-dev.3999 166 10/5/2021
3.1.0-dev.3841 247 9/29/2021
3.1.0-dev.3798 165 9/17/2021
3.0.0 1,174 9/17/2021
3.0.0-dev.3726 506 8/31/2021
3.0.0-dev.3719 154 8/31/2021
3.0.0-dev.3671 171 8/20/2021
2.2.0-dev.3652 161 8/20/2021
2.1.0 1,516 8/20/2021
2.1.0-dev.3605 164 8/17/2021
2.1.0-dev.3584 166 8/16/2021
2.1.0-dev.3558 155 8/16/2021
2.1.0-dev.3527 200 7/29/2021
2.1.0-dev.3519 208 7/29/2021
2.1.0-dev.3490 153 7/20/2021
2.1.0-dev.3445 180 7/12/2021
2.1.0-dev.3434 210 7/9/2021
2.0.0 8,977 7/9/2021
2.0.0-dev.3401 197 6/25/2021
2.0.0-dev.3368 182 6/23/2021
2.0.0-dev.3361 185 6/23/2021
2.0.0-dev.3330 190 6/17/2021
2.0.0-dev.3291 187 6/16/2021
1.20.0-dev.3218 205 6/4/2021
1.19.0 874 6/4/2021
1.19.0-dev.3204 180 6/3/2021
1.19.0-dev.3160 164 6/2/2021
1.19.0-dev.3159 160 6/2/2021
1.19.0-dev.3084 821 5/7/2021
1.19.0-dev.3051 179 5/5/2021
1.19.0-dev.3044 183 5/5/2021
1.19.0-dev.3008 178 4/30/2021
1.18.0 1,205 4/30/2021
1.18.0-dev.2973 188 4/27/2021
1.18.0-dev.2930 170 4/16/2021
1.18.0-dev.2919 166 4/13/2021
1.18.0-dev.2893 157 4/12/2021
1.18.0-dev.2880 170 4/12/2021
1.18.0-dev.2856 164 4/7/2021
1.18.0-dev.2830 250 4/1/2021
1.18.0-dev.2816 176 4/1/2021
1.17.0 714 4/1/2021
1.17.0-dev.linq.17 780 3/18/2021
1.17.0-dev.linq.16 163 3/16/2021
1.17.0-dev.linq.15 194 3/15/2021
1.17.0-dev.linq.14 204 3/12/2021
1.17.0-dev.linq.13 226 3/11/2021
1.17.0-dev.linq.12 177 3/10/2021
1.17.0-dev.linq.11 172 3/8/2021
1.17.0-dev.2776 194 3/26/2021
1.17.0-dev.2713 213 3/25/2021
1.16.0-dev.linq.10 1,220 2/4/2021
1.15.0-dev.linq.9 193 2/4/2021
1.15.0-dev.linq.8 167 1/28/2021
1.15.0-dev.linq.7 184 1/27/2021
1.15.0-dev.linq.6 206 1/20/2021
1.15.0-dev.linq.5 225 1/19/2021
1.15.0-dev.linq.4 191 1/15/2021
1.15.0-dev.linq.3 167 1/14/2021
1.15.0-dev.linq.2 183 1/13/2021
1.15.0-dev.linq.1 199 1/12/2021