Documentation

Regular expressions

Regular expressions are a sequence of characters used to identify patterns in identifiers and string values. InfluxQL supports regular expressions in the following operations:

Query performance

Regular expression comparisons are more computationally intensive than exact string comparisons. Queries with regular expressions are not as performant as those without.

Regular expression syntax

InfluxQL Regular expressions are surrounded by / characters and use the Go regular expression syntax.

/regular_expression/

Regular expression flags

Regular expression flags modify the pattern-matching behavior of the expression. InfluxQL supports the following regular expression flags:

FlagDescription
icase-insensitive
mmulti-line mode: ^ and $ match begin/end line in addition to begin/end text
slet . match \n
Uungreedy: swap meaning of x* and x*?, x+ and x+?, etc.

Include regular expression flags at the beginning of your regular expression pattern enclosed in parentheses (()) and preceded by a question mark (?).

/(?iU)foo*/

Regular expression operators

InfluxQL provides the following regular expression operators that test if a string operand matches a regular expression:

  • =~: Returns true if the string matches the regular expression
  • !~: Returns true if the string does not match the regular expression

InfluxQL regular expression operators are used to test string column values in the WHERE clause.

Regular expression examples

The examples below use the following sample data sets:

Use a regular expression to specify field keys and tag keys in the SELECT clause

Use a regular expression to specify measurements in the FROM clause

Use a regular expression to specify tag values in the WHERE clause

Use a regular expression to specify a tag with no value in the WHERE clause

Use a regular expression to specify tag keys in the GROUP BY clause


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InfluxDB OSS 2.9.0: API tokens are hashed by default

Stronger token security in InfluxDB OSS 2.9.0 — tokens are hashed on disk by default. Existing tokens are hashed on first startup and can’t be recovered afterward. Capture any plaintext tokens you still need before you upgrade.

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Hashed tokens authenticate exactly like unhashed tokens — clients and integrations keep working.

Also new in 2.9.0:

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Key enhancements in Explorer 1.8

Explorer 1.8 is now available with streaming data subscriptions (beta), line protocol preview, and query history & saved queries.

View Explorer 1.8 release notes

Explorer 1.8 includes new features and improvements that make it easier to ingest, explore, and manage data.

Highlights:

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For more details, see Explorer 1.8 release notes

InfluxDB 3.10 is now available

InfluxDB 3 Core 3.10 adds an automatic catalog format upgrade, a configurable query-concurrency limit, and processing engine improvements.

Key updates in InfluxDB 3 Core 3.10:

  • Catalog format upgrade: the on-disk catalog automatically upgrades from format v2 to v3 on first 3.10 startup. Migration is one-way—back up your catalog before upgrading.
  • --max-concurrent-queries: limit concurrent queries (adjustable at runtime).
  • GET /ready endpoint for readiness probes.
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For more information, see the InfluxDB 3 Core release notes.

InfluxDB 3.10 is now available

InfluxDB 3 Enterprise 3.10 adds automated backup and restore, row-level deletions, and user management, with an automatic catalog format upgrade and performance preview improvements.

Key updates in InfluxDB 3 Enterprise 3.10:

  • Catalog format upgrade: the on-disk catalog automatically upgrades from format v2 to v3 on first 3.10 startup. Migration is one-way—back up your catalog before upgrading.
  • Automated backup and restore (beta)
  • Row-level deletions
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Backup and restore, row-level deletions, and the performance preview require the Enterprise storage engine upgrade (opt-in beta). Beta and preview features are subject to breaking changes and aren’t recommended for production use.

For more information, see the InfluxDB 3 Enterprise release notes

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The upcoming Telegraf Enterprise offering is for organizations running Telegraf at scale and is comprised of two key components:

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InfluxDB Docker latest tag changing to InfluxDB 3 Core

On September 15, 2026, the latest tag for InfluxDB Docker images will point to InfluxDB 3 Core. To avoid unexpected upgrades, use specific version tags in your Docker deployments.

If using Docker to install and run InfluxDB, the latest tag will point to InfluxDB 3 Core. To avoid unexpected upgrades, use specific version tags in your Docker deployments. For example, if using Docker to run InfluxDB v2, replace the latest version tag with a specific version tag in your Docker pull command–for example:

docker pull influxdb:2

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