unit property
The units in which the metric value is reported.
It is only applicable if the value_type is INT64, DOUBLE, or
DISTRIBUTION. The unit defines the representation of the stored metric
values. Different systems might scale the values to be more easily
displayed (so a value of 0.02kBy might be displayed as 20By, and a
value of 3523kBy might be displayed as 3.5MBy). However, if the
unit is kBy, then the value of the metric is always in thousands of
bytes, no matter how it might be displayed. If you want a custom metric to
record the exact number of CPU-seconds used by a job, you can create an
INT64 CUMULATIVE metric whose unit is s{CPU} (or equivalently
1s{CPU} or just s). If the job uses 12,005 CPU-seconds, then the value
is written as 12005. Alternatively, if you want a custom metric to
record data in a more granular way, you can create a DOUBLE CUMULATIVE
metric whose unit is ks{CPU}, and then write the value 12.005 (which
is 12005/1000), or use Kis{CPU} and write 11.723 (which is
12005/1024). The supported units are a subset of
The Unified Code for Units of Measure
standard: Basic units (UNIT) * bit bit * By byte * s second *
min minute * h hour * d day * 1 dimensionless Prefixes
(PREFIX) * k kilo (10^3) * M mega (10^6) * G giga (10^9) * T
tera (10^12) * P peta (10^15) * E exa (10^18) * Z zetta (10^21) *
Y yotta (10^24) * m milli (10^-3) * u micro (10^-6) * n nano
(10^-9) * p pico (10^-12) * f femto (10^-15) * a atto (10^-18) * z
zepto (10^-21) * y yocto (10^-24) * Ki kibi (2^10) * Mi mebi (2^20)
Gigibi (2^30) *Titebi (2^40) *Pipebi (2^50) Grammar The grammar also includes these connectors: */division or ratio (as an infix operator). For examples,kBy/{email}orMiBy/10ms(although you should almost never have/sin a metricunit; rates should always be computed at query time from the underlying cumulative or delta value). *.multiplication or composition (as an infix operator). For examples,GBy.dork{watt}.h. The grammar for a unit is as follows: Expression = Component { "." Component } { "/" Component } ; Component = ( [ PREFIX ] UNIT | "%" ) [ Annotation ] | Annotation | "1" ; Annotation = "{" NAME "}" ; Notes: *Annotationis just a comment if it follows aUNIT. If the annotation is used alone, then the unit is equivalent to1. For examples,{request}/s == 1/s,By{transmitted}/s == By/s. *NAMEis a sequence of non-blank printable ASCII characters not containing{or}. *1represents a unitary dimensionless unit of 1, such as in1/s. It is typically used when none of the basic units are appropriate. For example, "new users per day" can be represented as1/dor{new-users}/d(and a metric value5would mean "5 new users). Alternatively, "thousands of page views per day" would be represented as1000/dork1/dork{page_views}/d(and a metric value of5.3would mean "5300 page views per day"). *%represents dimensionless value of 1/100, and annotates values giving a percentage (so the metric values are typically in the range of 0..100, and a metric value3means "3 percent"). *10^2.%indicates a metric contains a ratio, typically in the range 0..1, that will be multiplied by 100 and displayed as a percentage (so a metric value0.03means "3 percent").
Implementation
core.String? unit;