| name | greptimedb-trigger |
| description | [Enterprise only] Guide for creating GreptimeDB Triggers — periodic evaluation rules (SQL or TQL/PromQL via TQL EVAL) that fire Alertmanager-compatible webhooks when conditions are met. Use as an alternative to Prometheus alerting rules, or to host existing PromQL alerts on GreptimeDB. Triggers on phrases like "create trigger", "alerting rule", "告警规则", "trigger webhook", "alertmanager 对接", "migrate prometheus alerts", "promql alert". |
GreptimeDB Trigger Guide
Enterprise only. Triggers are available only in GreptimeDB Enterprise.
For open-source deployments, fall back to Prometheus Alertmanager or an
external scheduler.
Create GreptimeDB trigger definition as an alternative to Prometheus alerting
rules. A trigger periodically runs a query — a SQL SELECT or a TQL EVAL
block wrapping a PromQL expression — and turns each result row into an alert
instance. Most concepts from Prometheus alerting rules map directly onto
trigger DDL, and existing PromQL rules can be hosted as-is through TQL EVAL.
The workflow
To create a GreptimeDB trigger, we should follow these phases:
Phase 1. Understanding GreptimeDB Trigger
First, we should read the trigger reference from the documentation.
There are pages available, use WebFetch to load and understand them:
- High-level overview and a worked example
https://docs.greptime.com/enterprise/trigger/
- Full trigger syntax reference
https://docs.greptime.com/reference/sql/trigger-syntax/
Phase 2. Syntax essentials
The ON clause accepts either:
- a plain SQL
SELECT (typical for GreptimeDB-native queries), or
- a
TQL EVAL expression that embeds a PromQL-style query — this is
the migration path for users porting Prometheus alerting rules.
TQL EVAL syntax inside ON:
ON (TQL EVAL (<start>, <end>, <step>[, <lookback>]) <promql_expression>)
See the TQL reference for
the start / end / step semantics.
Example:
CREATE TRIGGER cpu_monitor
ON (
TQL EVAL (now(), now(), '1m')
avg_over_time(cpu_usage_total[1m])
) EVERY '1 minute'::INTERVAL
NOTIFY (
WEBHOOK alert_manager URL 'http://127.0.0.1:9093' WITH (timeout='1m')
);
When the user starts from a PromQL alert rule, keep it as TQL EVAL —
do not rewrite it to SQL aggregation just to fit the trigger. For cases
where the rule is natively SQL, write a regular SELECT with a time
window filter (e.g. WHERE ts >= NOW() - '1 minutes'::INTERVAL) and
GROUP BY for per-series evaluation.
Skeleton:
CREATE TRIGGER [IF NOT EXISTS] <trigger_name>
ON (<SELECT ...>) EVERY <interval>
[LABELS (<k>=<v>, ...)]
[ANNOTATIONS (<k>=<v>, ...)]
[FOR <interval>]
[KEEP FIRING FOR <interval>]
NOTIFY (
WEBHOOK <notify_name> URL '<url>' [WITH (<k>=<v>, ...)]
);
Key clauses:
ON (<SELECT>) EVERY <interval> — the query runs on the given
cadence. Each returned row produces one alert instance, keyed by its
label set. Columns whose name or alias starts with label_ are extracted
as dynamic labels (the label_ prefix is stripped); all other
columns become annotations. Rows with the same label set collapse
into a single alert.
LABELS (...) — static labels merged into every alert instance.
These are what Alertmanager routes / groups / silences on.
ANNOTATIONS (...) — static annotations for human-readable context.
FOR <interval> — how long the condition must keep matching before
the alert transitions from Pending to Firing (and fires a
notification). Without FOR, an alert fires on first appearance.
KEEP FIRING FOR <interval> — sets a minimum firing duration. Once an
alert enters Firing, it remains firing for at least this long, even if
the condition later stops matching. After that duration has elapsed, it
can be marked resolved on a subsequent evaluation where the condition is
absent.
NOTIFY (WEBHOOK ...) — currently only the WEBHOOK channel is
supported, with an optional WITH (timeout='1m') parameter. Payload is
compatible with Prometheus Alertmanager, so an existing Alertmanager can
receive trigger alerts without glue code.
Interval notes: INTERVAL expressions may not use years or months
(variable-length). Minimum granularity is 1 second.
Worked SQL example:
CREATE TRIGGER IF NOT EXISTS `load1_monitor`
ON (
SELECT
host AS label_host,
avg(load1) AS avg_load1,
max(ts) AS ts
FROM public.load1
WHERE ts >= NOW() - '1 minutes'::INTERVAL
GROUP BY host
HAVING avg(load1) > 10
) EVERY '1 minutes'::INTERVAL
FOR '3 minutes'::INTERVAL
KEEP FIRING FOR '3 minutes'::INTERVAL
LABELS (severity=warning)
ANNOTATIONS (comment='Your computer is smoking, should take a break.')
NOTIFY (
WEBHOOK alert_manager URL 'http://localhost:9093' WITH (timeout='1m')
);
Lifecycle: SHOW TRIGGERS [LIKE ... | WHERE ...], SHOW CREATE TRIGGER <name>,
DROP TRIGGER [IF EXISTS] <name>.
Phase 3. Configure webhook for trigger
Return a complete CREATE TRIGGER SQL statement. If the user did not
provide webhook details, use a placeholder Alertmanager URL (e.g.
http://localhost:9093) and tell them what to swap in.
If the user already runs a Prometheus Alertmanager, point the trigger
webhook at the same Alertmanager — the alert payload is Alertmanager-native,
so routing / grouping / inhibition / silencing all work unchanged.
Reference
Prometheus Alertmanager
Alertmanager is typically configured in prometheus.yml like this:
alerting:
alertmanagers:
- static_configs:
- targets:
- localhost:9093
We can use this target as our webhook destination.
Step-by-step guide
https://greptime.com/blogs/2025-12-23-trigger-quick-start