System variables reference
BigQuery supports the following system variables for multi-statement queries or within sessions. You can use system variables to set or retrieve information during query execution, similar to user-defined procedural language variables.
Name | Type | Read and write or read-only | Description |
---|---|---|---|
@@current_job_id |
STRING |
Read-only | Job ID of the currently executing job. In the context of a multi-statement query, this returns the job responsible for the current statement, not the entire multi-statement query. |
@@dataset_id |
STRING |
Read and write |
ID of the default dataset in the current project. This ID is used when a
dataset is not specified for a project in the query. You can use the
SET statement to assign @@dataset_id to
another dataset ID in the current project. The system variables
@@dataset_project_id and @@dataset_id can be
set and used together.
|
@@dataset_project_id |
STRING |
Read and write |
ID of the default project that's used when one is not specified for a
dataset used in the query. If @@dataset_project_id is not
set, or if it is set to NULL , the query-executing project
(@@project_id ) is used. You can use the SET
statement to assign @@dataset_project_id to another
project ID. The system variables @@dataset_project_id and
@@dataset_id can be set and used together.
|
@@last_job_id |
STRING |
Read-only |
Job ID of the most recent job to execute in the current
multi-statement query, not including the current one. If the
multi-statement query contains CALL statements,
this job may have originated in a different procedure.
|
@@project_id |
STRING |
Read-only |
ID of the project used to execute the current query. In the
context of a procedure, @@project_id refers to the project
that is running the multi-statement query, not the project which owns the procedure.
|
@@query_label |
STRING |
Read and write |
Query label to associate with query jobs in the current
multi-statement query or session. If set in a query, all subsequent
query jobs in the script or session will have this label.
If not set in a query, the value for this system variable is
NULL . For an example of how to set this system variable,
see
Associate jobs in a session with a label.
|
@@row_count |
INT64 |
Read-only |
If used in a multi-statement query and the previous
statement is DML, specifies the number of rows modified, inserted, or
deleted, as a result of that DML statement. If the previous statement is
a MERGE statement, @@row_count represents the combined
total number of rows inserted, removed, and deleted. This value is
NULL if not in a multi-statement query.
|
@@script.bytes_billed |
INT64 |
Read-only |
Total bytes billed so far in the currently executing
multi-statement query job. This value is NULL
if not in the job.
|
@@script.bytes_processed |
INT64 |
Read-only |
Total bytes processed so far in the currently executing
multi-statement query job. This value is NULL
if not in the job.
|
@@script.creation_time |
TIMESTAMP |
Read-only |
Creation time of the currently executing
multi-statement query job.
This value is NULL if not in the job.
|
@@script.job_id |
STRING |
Read-only |
Job ID of the currently executing
multi-statement query job. This value is
NULL if not in the job.
|
@@script.num_child_jobs |
INT64 |
Read-only |
Number of currently completed child jobs. This value is
NULL if not in the job.
|
@@script.slot_ms |
INT64 |
Read-only |
Number of slot milliseconds used so far by the script.
This value is NULL if not in the job.
|
@@session_id |
INT64 |
Read-only | ID of the session that the current query is associated with. |
@@time_zone |
STRING |
Read and write |
The default time zone to use in time zone-dependent SQL functions,
when a time zone is not specified as an argument.
@@time_zone can be modified by
using a SET statement to any valid time zone name.
At the start of each script, @@time_zone begins as
“UTC”.
|
For backward compatibility, expressions used in an OPTIONS
or
FOR SYSTEM TIME AS OF
clause default to the America/Los_Angeles
time zone,
while all other date/time expressions default to the UTC
time zone. If
@@time_zone
has been set earlier in the multi-statement query, the chosen
time zone will apply to all date/time expressions, including OPTIONS
and
FOR SYSTEM TIME AS OF
clauses.
In addition to the system variables shown previously, you can use EXCEPTION
system
variables during execution of a multi-statement query. For more information
about the EXCEPTION
system variables, see the procedural language statement
BEGIN...EXCEPTION.
Examples
You don't create system variables, but you can override the default value for some of them:
SET @@dataset_project_id = 'MyProject';
The following query returns the default time zone:
SELECT @@time_zone AS default_time_zone;
+-------------------+
| default_time_zone |
+-------------------+
| UTC |
+-------------------+
You can use system variables with DDL and DML queries.
For example, here are a few ways to use the system variable @@time_zone
when creating and updating a table:
BEGIN
CREATE TEMP TABLE MyTempTable
AS SELECT @@time_zone AS default_time_zone;
END;
CREATE OR REPLACE TABLE MyDataset.MyTable(default_time_zone STRING)
OPTIONS (description = @@time_zone);
UPDATE MyDataset.MyTable
SET default_time_zone = @@time_zone
WHERE TRUE;
There are some places where system variables can't be used in
DDL and DML queries. For example, you can't use a system variable as a
project name, dataset, or table name. The following query produces an error when
you include the @@dataset_id
system variable in a table path:
BEGIN
CREATE TEMP TABLE @@dataset_id.MyTempTable (id STRING);
END;
For more examples of how you can use system variables in multi-statement queries, see Set a variable.
For examples of how you can use system variables in sessions, see Example session.