It looks like that no one wrote detail about Azure CLI consumption usage query, so I provides personal ways for readers.
Regarding the cost, it can be said that the boss cares most
,
the cost analysis function of Azure Portal has actually been done very well, which can solve most of the needs
,but sometimes it's necessary to customize
or search unexpected expense details
, then you can use Azure CLI az consumption usage at this time.
the advantages are :
- powerful dynamic query
- get detailed information directly about wasteful services
- it can get ID value and join other service data
First use az consumption usage -h to check the supported functions, because it's the preview version
, only list
query function is currently supported.
sa@DESKTOP-WEI:~$ az consumption usage list - [tab][tab]
--billing-period-name --query -h
--debug --query-examples -m
--end-date --start-date -o
--help --subscription -p
--include-additional-properties --top -s
--include-meter-details --verbose -t
--only-show-errors -a
--output -e
The options I will use :
-
--query
support JMESPath JSON query language -
--includ-meter-details -m
show meter data -
--start-date -s
,--end-date -e
filter date
For example :
$ az consumption usage list
Azure will return JSON array
data UsageDetail
[
{
"accountName": null,
"billableQuantity": "None",
"billingPeriodId": "/subscriptions/c905f1a3-b790-47cb-98f5-eb7b89d7d768/providers/Microsoft.Billing/billingPeriods/202010",
"consumedService": "Microsoft.Network",
"costCenter": null,
"currency": "USD",
"departmentName": null,
"id": "/subscriptions/c905f1a3-b790-47cb-98f5-eb7b89d7d768/providers/Microsoft.Billing/billingPeriods/202010/providers/Microsoft.Consumption/usageDetails/85b8a5ed-ccf7-1870-4ad2-dadd26be9f30",
"instanceId": "/subscriptions/c905f1a3-b790-47cb-98f5-eb7b89d7d768/resourceGroups/demo/providers/Microsoft.Network/publicIPAddresses/demoVMPublicIP",
"instanceLocation": "AP Southeast",
"instanceName": "demoVMPublicIP",
"invoiceId": null,
"isEstimated": true,
"meterId": "ae56b367-2708-4454-a3d9-2be7b2364ea1",
"name": "85b8a5ed-ccf7-1870-4ad2-dadd26be9f30",
"pretaxCost": "0",
"product": "",
"subscriptionGuid": "C905F1A3-B790-47CB-98F5-EB7B89D7D768",
"subscriptionName": "Free Trial",
"tags": null,
"type": "Microsoft.Consumption/usageDetails",
"usageEnd": "2020-09-30T23:59:59Z",
"usageQuantity": "8.6966666666000005392334060161374509334564208984375",
"usageStart": "2020-09-30T00:00:00Z"
}
]
Add -m
, there will be more meterDetails attributes
, you can know which service type
belongs to by meterCategory
"meterDetails": {
"meterCategory": "Virtual Network",
"meterLocation": "AP Southeast",
"meterName": "Dynamic Public IP - Free",
"meterSubCategory": "IP Addresses",
"pretaxStandardRate": "None",
"serviceName": "Virtual Network",
"serviceTier": "IP Addresses",
"totalIncludedQuantity": "None",
"unit": ""
}
Then we have to deal with the problem of too much data and attributes
.e.g, only few days since I tested, and there're already 204 items.
So we need to use --query
to select the data we want.
az consumption usage list --query "[] | length(@)"
Example 1 : List the details and required fields: name, service type, pre-tax fee, date
az consumption usage list -m --query "[0].{name:instanceName,ser:consumedService,cat:meterDetails.meterCategory,pretaxCost:pretaxCost.to_number(@),date:usageStart}"
Example 2: Query the top 5 resources that spend the most on 10/2
logic :
- Because
JMESPath only has sort_by positive order
and not reverse order, so use sort_by[-5:]
to get last 5 data of positive order to simulate reverse order function. - pretaxCost is
string type
by default, so it needs to be converted to number usingto_number(@)
function.
# Recommend to use -s -e to filter dates
az consumption usage list -m -s "2020-10-02" -e "2020-10-02" --query "sort_by([],&pretaxCost.to_number(@))[-5:].{name:instanceName,ser:consumedService,cat:meterDetails.meterCategory,pretaxCost:pretaxCost.to_number(@),sDate:usageStart}" -o table
# The way of JMESPath to filter dates
az consumption usage list -m --query "[?usageStart=='2020-10-02T00:00:00Z'] | sort_by([],&pretaxCost.to_number(@))[-5:].{name:instanceName,ser:consumedService,cat:meterDetails.meterCategory,pretaxCost:pretaxCost.to_number(@),sDate:usageStart}" -o table
Example 3: Filter app service spending details and sort by date consumption amount
az consumption usage list -m --query "[?meterDetails.meterCategory == 'Azure App Service'].{name:instanceName,ser:consumedService,cat:meterDetails.meterCategory,pretaxCost:pretaxCost.to_number(@),sDate:usageStart} | sort_by([],&pretaxCost.to_number(@))" -o table
Example 4: Filter the total cost of app service
az consumption usage list -m --query "[?meterDetails.meterCategory == 'Azure App Service'].pretaxCost.to_number(@) | sum([]) "
Example 5: Total cost before tax
az consumption usage list -m --query "[].pretaxCost.to_number(@) | sum([])"
Example 6: Filter out the cost data of 0 $
Note: Remember to use "\'", otherwise the system will not recognize it, and return the error message:
ArgumentParseError: argument --query: invalid jmespath_type value: '[?pretaxCost.to_number(@) > ].{name:instanceName,ser:consumedService,cat:meterDetails.meterCategory,pretaxCost:pretaxCost.to_number(@),sDate:usageStart} | sort_by([],&pretaxCost)'
az consumption usage list -m --query "[?pretaxCost.to_number(@) > \`0\`].{name:instanceName,ser:consumedService,cat:meterDetails.meterCategory,pretaxCost:pretaxCost.to_number(@),sDate:usageStart} | sort_by([],&pretaxCost)" -o table
Note: If do not specify -s and -e date
, default to filter data within 15 days
For example: 2020-10-05 query will only bring out data from 2020-09-20 ~ 2020-10-05
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