QuestDB 6.0.5 September release, geospatial support

The latest QuestDB release introduces support for geospatial data via the addition of geohash types. Geohashes encode geographic areas as base-32 strings, and native support for this type allows for fast and efficient querying and storage of geodata. Also included are helper functions for rounding timestamps, performance improvements for existing functions, alongside other fixes and features. Here's the full roundup of changes that have just landed!

QuestDB 6.0.5

The addition of geospatial data in QuestDB opens up various possibilities to include spatial dimensions in data sets in QuestDB. We're excited at the options for using QuestDB in different new use cases such as asset tracking, computer vision, machine learning, and other challenging domains. We're excited to see what our community builds with the newly-supported functionality and eagerly awaiting your feedback!

Geospatial support via geohashes

A geohash is a convenient way of expressing a location using a short alphanumeric string, with greater precision obtained with longer strings. The basic idea is that the Earth is divided into grids of defined size, and each area is assigned a unique id called its Geohash.

For a given location on Earth, we can convert latitude and longitude as the approximate center point of a grid represented by a geohash string. This string is the Geohash and will determine which of the predefined regions the point belongs to.

An illustration showing two maps with different geohash precision levels applied

To assist with geospatial queries, a new geohash type has been added to QuestDB which allows storing and querying spatial data. The syntax follows the format geohash(<precision>). The following examples show how to create tables with geohash types and to make basic queries by geohash:

Geohash overview
-- Create two geohash columns with different precision
CREATE TABLE geo_data (g5c geohash(5c), g29b geohash(29b));
-- Inserting geohash literals
INSERT INTO geo_data VALUES(#u33d8, ##10101111100101111111101101101)
-- Querying by geohash
SELECT * FROM geo_data WHERE g5c = #u33d8;

To help with geospatial queries, a within operator has been added which helps evaluate if a geohash is equal to or is within a larger grid. The following query will return the most recent entries by device ID if the g8c column contains a geohash within u33d:

within operator
SELECT * FROM geo_data LATEST BY device_id
WHERE g8c within(#u33d);

Geohashes can be used in SQL via PostgreSQL and HTTP with geohash literals and string to geohash conversion and with some special handling over InfluxDB Line Protocol. For full details of supported features and functionality including advanced usage, see the geohash documentation.

first() and last() functions

The first() and last() functions have had significant internal performance improvements with the latest release. Improving the efficiency of these functions has the benefit that geospatial queries are significantly faster. The most common types of queries which are likely to benefit from this improvement are those such as "last-known location" of a device or vessel:

last() example
SELECT ts, last(g8c) FROM geo_data
WHERE device_id = 'device_3';

Timestamp floor and ceiling functions

To aid with rounding timestamp values, it's now possible to use timestamp_floo() and timestamp_ceil() functions to round up or down by a unit of choice:

WITH t AS (SELECT cast('2016-02-10T16:18:22.862145Z' AS timestamp) ts)
SELECT
ts,
-- floor
timestamp_floor('T', ts) f_milli,
timestamp_floor('s', ts) f_second,
timestamp_floor('m', ts) f_minute,
-- ceiling
timestamp_ceil('h', ts) c_hour,
timestamp_ceil('d', ts) c_day,
timestamp_ceil('M', ts) c_month
FROM t

For more details on using these functions and reference documentation for the types of units that can be passed, see the date and time functions documentation.

Run QuestDB 6.0.5

The release notes including a changelog is available on GitHub and this version has been published to Docker Hub. To pull the 6.0.5 tag and start up QuestDB, use docker run:

docker run -p 9000:9000 -p 8812:8812 -p 9009:9009 \
questdb/questdb:6.0.5

Next up

We have been tracking the most active GitHub discussions, and we are keeping a keen eye on the features and fixes that are most popular to our community. We are picking up the most upvoted and active topics in our GitHub Discussions and the feature requests in GitHub issues. If there's a feature you'd love to see, open a discussion on the topic or share your support if a thread for it exists already!

We're eagerly awaiting feedback on this release, so feel free to reach out and tell us how this version is running. Let us know how we're doing or just come by and say hello in our community forums or browse the repository on GitHub.

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