Examine the Azure Stream Analytics windowing functions

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In time-streaming scenarios, performing operations on the data contained in temporal windows is a common pattern. Stream Analytics has native support for windowing functions, enabling developers to author complex stream processing jobs with minimal effort.

There are five kinds of temporal windows to choose from: Tumbling, Hopping, Sliding, Session, and Snapshot windows. You use the window functions in the GROUP BY clause of the query syntax in your Stream Analytics jobs. You can also aggregate events over multiple windows using the Windows() function.

All the windowing operations output results at the end of the window. The output of the window will be single event based on the aggregate function used. The output event will have the time stamp of the end of the window and all window functions are defined with a fixed length.

Diagram that illustrates the concept of Azure Stream Analytics window functions.

Tumbling window

Tumbling window functions are used to segment a data stream into distinct time segments and perform a function against them, such as the example below. The key differentiators of a Tumbling window are that they repeat, do not overlap, and an event cannot belong to more than one tumbling window.

Diagram that shows the key differentiators of a Tumbling window.

Hopping window

Hopping window functions hop forward in time by a fixed period. It may be easy to think of them as Tumbling windows that can overlap, so events can belong to more than one Hopping window result set. To make a Hopping window the same as a Tumbling window, specify the hop size to be the same as the window size.

Diagram that shows the key differentiators of a Hopping window.

Sliding window

Sliding windows, unlike tumbling or hopping windows, output events only for points in time when the content of the window actually changes — in other words, when an event enters or exits the window. So, every window has at least one event. Similar to hopping windows, events can belong to more than one sliding window.

Diagram that shows the key differentiators of a Sliding window.

Session window

Session window functions group events that arrive at similar times, filtering out periods of time where there is no data. It has three main parameters: timeout, maximum duration, and partitioning key (optional).

Diagram that shows the key differentiators of a Session window.

A session window begins when the first event occurs. If another event occurs within the specified timeout from the last ingested event, then the window extends to include the new event. Otherwise if no events occur within the timeout, then the window is closed at the timeout.

If events keep occurring within the specified timeout, the session window will keep extending until maximum duration is reached. The maximum duration checking intervals are set to be the same size as the specified max duration. For example, if the max duration is 10, then the checks on if the window exceed maximum duration will happen at t = 0, 10, 20, 30, etc.

When a partition key is provided, the events are grouped together by the key and session window is applied to each group independently. This partitioning is useful for cases where you need different session windows for different users or devices.

Snapshot window

Snapshot windows groups events that have the same timestamp. Unlike other windowing types, which require a specific window function (such as SessionWindow(), you can apply a snapshot window by adding System.Timestamp() to the GROUP BY clause.

Diagram that shows the key differentiators of a Snapshot window.