The dashboards discussed here are classic dashboards created using the dashboarding functionality integrated with previous Dynatrace.
To visualize your query results as a pie/doughnut chart, select Pie
from the list above the query definition, in the upper-left corner of the page.
When switching between visualizations, be aware that some visualization settings are visualization-specific.
If you select a visualization and configure Settings for that visualization, and then you switch to a different visualization, some of your settings for the first visualization may be ignored because they don't apply to the newly selected visualization. An information icon in the list of visualizations will alert you to the possibility.
If you switch back to the original visualization, you may need to reconfigure some visualization settings.
By default, this visualization shows the first metric of a multi-metric query.
To select a different metric from a multi-metric query, you can select the letter next to the metric you want to visualize, or you can select the eye icon .
The Settings section is one of the expandable sections in the right panel of Data Explorer. The contents of the Settings section may vary depending on the visualization you have selected.
Whether to display a legend under the visualization.
Note that the legend is active: you can select a legend entry to toggle display of the corresponding entry on or off.
The fold transformation combines a data points list (a timeseries: a collection of data points over the time period) into a single data point.
Auto
, which automatically selects the most appropriate time aggregation based on the metric.Auto
with any of the following: Last value
, Average
, Count
, Maximum
, Minimum
, Sum
, Median
, Value
, Percentile 10th
, Percentile 75th
, Percentile 90th
.Last value
.Be aware that the Fold transformation setting affects the resolution.
If Fold transformation is set to Auto
for visualization Table
, Single value
, Top list
, or Honeycomb
, the Inf
(infinity) resolution is used to maintain backward compatibility. If the chosen metric selector doesn't support the Inf
resolution, the fold
transformation is automatically added to the end of the query.
If Fold transformation is set to a value other than Auto
, fold
is used.
Because all metric selectors are queried using the same total value mechanism (either fold
or Inf
), adding a new selector that requires fold
might change the result of the other selectors.
To inspect the actual query used by Data Explorer, go to the Result section in Data Explorer and select > Copy request.
The Settings section also displays visualization options per metric selected for the query.
You can change the name of a metric as it is displayed on the chart and in the chart legend. The query definition retains the metric's original name.
To change the color palette for a metric, in the Settings section, select a new palette from the list.
Use the Unit and Format settings to determine how your data is displayed. If you export to a CSV file, the Unit and Format settings are also reflected in the exported values.
Use the Unit setting to set the unit in which the metric is displayed.
None
= No unit displayedAuto
= Dynatrace selects an appropriate display unit:setUnit(<unit>)
to select from a wider range of units.Examples of order-of-magnitude notation in Dynatrace:
Notation
Factor
Meaning
k
10^3
kilo, thousand
M
10^6
mega, million
G
10^9
giga, billion
T
10^12
tera, trillion
Use the Format setting to configure the number of decimal places displayed for the selected metric.
None
= No formatting.Auto
= Dynatrace selects an appropriate format. For example, where None
would display 5.062357754177517 %
, Auto
would display 5.06 %
.0
, 0.0
, 0.00
, 0.000
When the basic unit of the metric is bytes:
If you set Unit to Auto
, Dynatrace automatically expresses the results in a human-readable unit, which in this case could be GiB
.
A byte-based unit can have either a binary or decimal base, which will determine whether Dynatrace selects, for example, GiB
or GB
. If no base is defined in the metric itself, a decimal base is used.
If the automatically selected unit isn't suitable in your case, you can force Dynatrace to express the same values in a specific unit (Unit = B
, KiB
, MiB
, or GiB
).
If you want to see raw data (no conversion), you can set Unit to None
and see the results in the basic unit of the metric (which in this case is bytes).
When the basic unit of a metric is dollars and cents:
Auto
, and set Format to 0.00
(to have two decimal places for the cents).k (thousand)
, M (million)
, G (billion)
, and set Format to 0
(to see nothing after the decimal point).When the basic unit for the metric is a count:
To see an exact count:
Auto
None
To see a rough count:
k (thousand)
, M (million)
, G (billion)
, or T (trillion)
, depending on the magnitude of your values0.0
, 0.00
, or 0.0000
, depending on how many decimal places make sense in combination with the selected Unit settingWhen setting threshold values:
MiB
), the Threshold settings are then prepared to match the selected unit, so you just need to enter threshold values without specifying MiB
.Auto
(to let Dynatrace automatically scale the displayed output), you still need to set Threshold values in a specific unit such as bytes.To force a different color (override the color palette) for a specific series such as a selected host