Unfortunately I've never used Postgres, so this solution works in MySQL. But I think you can find out Postgres analogs.
class Counter < ActiveRecord::Base
has_many :samples do
# default 30 minutes
def per_time_slice(slice = 30)
start = "2000-01-01 00:00:00"
self.select("*,
CONCAT( FLOOR(TIMESTAMPDIFF(MINUTE,'#{start}',created_at)/#{slice})*#{slice},
(FLOOR(TIMESTAMPDIFF(MINUTE,'#{start}',created_at)/#{slice})+1)*#{slice} ) as slice,
avg(value) as avg_value,
min(value) as min_value,
max(value) as max_value,
sum(value) as sum_value,
count(value) as count_value").
group("slice").order("slice")
end
end
end
Usage
counter = find_some_counter
samples = counter.samples.per_time_slice(60).where(:name => "Bobby")
samples.map(&:avg_value)
samples.map(&:min_value)
samples.map(&:max_value)
etc
Sample? Andcounter has_many :samples? And you need to find max, min etc ofvalue? – fl00r Mar 11 '11 at 13:56