reference_en.html 375.9 KB
Newer Older
1
<!DOCTYPE html>
2
<html lang="en">
3
    <head>
4
        <meta charset="utf-8"/>
5 6
        <title>ClickHouse Guide</title>

7
        <link rel="shortcut icon" href="favicon.ico"/>
8
        <link rel="stylesheet" href="reference.css"/>
9 10 11

        <meta name="description" content="ClickHouse — open-source distributed column-oriented DBMS"/>
		<meta name="keywords" content="ClickHouse, DBMS, OLAP, relational, analytics, analytical, big data, open-source, SQL, web-analytics"/>
12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38
    </head>
    <body>

<script type="text/javascript">
function getParams() {
    var matches = document.cookie.match(/yandex_login=([\w\-]+)/);
    return (matches && matches.length == 2) ? { "login": matches[1] } : {};
}
</script>

<!-- Yandex.Metrica counter -->
<script src="https://mc.yandex.ru/metrika/watch.js" type="text/javascript"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">
try { var yaCounter18343495 = new Ya.Metrika({id:18343495,
          webvisor:true,
          clickmap:true,
          trackLinks:true,
          accurateTrackBounce:true,
          trackHash:true,
          params: getParams()});
} catch(e) { }
</script>
<noscript><div><img src="https://mc.yandex.ru/watch/18343495" style="position:absolute; left:-9999px;" alt=" " /></div></noscript>
<!-- /Yandex.Metrica counter -->

<script type="text/javascript" src="https://yandex.st/jquery/1.7.2/jquery.min.js"></script>

39
<div class="island">
40

41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57
<div style="float: left; margin-right: -100%; margin-top: 3px; margin-left: 3px;">
	<a href="/">
		<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" width="90" height="80" viewBox="0 0 9 8">
			<style>
				.o{fill:#fc0}
				.r{fill:#f00}
			</style>
			<path class="r" d="M0,7 h1 v1 h-1 z"/>
			<path class="o" d="M0,0 h1 v7 h-1 z"/>
			<path class="o" d="M2,0 h1 v8 h-1 z"/>
			<path class="o" d="M4,0 h1 v8 h-1 z"/>
			<path class="o" d="M6,0 h1 v8 h-1 z"/>
			<path class="o" d="M8,3.25 h1 v1.5 h-1 z"/>
		</svg>
	</a>
</div>

58 59
<div style="float: right; margin-left: -100%; margin-top: 3px; margin-right: 3px;">
	<div style="display: inline-block; width: 50px; text-align: center; margin-right: 2px;">
60
	<a href="reference_ru.html" title="In russian">
61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70
		<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 10 6" width="50" height="30" style="border: 1px solid #AAA;">
			<rect fill="#fff" width="10" height="3"/>
			<rect fill="#d52b1e" y="3" width="10" height="3"/>
			<rect fill="#0039a6" y="2" width="10" height="2"/>
		</svg>
	Russian
	</a>
	</div>

	<div style="display: inline-block; width: 50px; text-align: center; margin-left: 2px;">
71
	<a href="reference_en.html" title="In english">
72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82
		<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" width="50" height="30" viewBox="0,0 25,15" style="border: 1px solid #AAA;">
			<rect width="25" height="15" fill="#00247d"/>
			<path d="M 0,0 L 25,15 M 25,0 L 0,15" stroke="#fff" stroke-width="3"/>
			<path d="M 12.5,0 V 15 M 0,7.5 H 25" stroke="#fff" stroke-width="5"/>
			<path d="M 12.5,0 V 15 M 0,7.5 H 25" stroke="#cf142b" stroke-width="3"/>
		</svg>
	English
	</a>
	</div>
</div>

83
<h1 class="title not-for-contents"><a class="title_link" href="/">ClickHouse</a></h1>
84 85
<h2 class="subtitle not-for-contents">Reference Manual</h2>
<div class="signature"> — Alexey Milovidov</div>
86 87
</div>

88
<div class="island">
89 90
<h1>Contents</h1>
<br />
91
<div id="contents"></div>
92 93
</div>

94
<div class="island">
95 96 97
<h1>Introduction</h1>
</div>

98 99 100 101 102 103 104
<div class="island content">
==What is ClickHouse?==
ClickHouse is a columnar DBMS for OLAP.

In a &quot;normal&quot; row-oriented DBMS, data is stored in this order:

%%
105
5123456789123456789     1       Eurobasket - Greece - Bosnia and Herzegovina - example.com      1       2011-09-01 01:03:02     6274717   1294101174      11409   612345678912345678      0       33      6       http://www.example.com/basketball/team/123/match/456789.html http://www.example.com/basketball/team/123/match/987654.html       0       1366    768     32      10      3183      0       0       13      0\0     1       1       0       0                       2011142 -1      0               0       01321     613     660     2011-09-01 08:01:17     0       0       0       0       utf-8   1466    0       0       0       5678901234567890123               277789954       0       0       0       0       0
106 107
5234985259563631958     0       Consulting, Tax assessment, Accounting, Law       1       2011-09-01 01:03:02     6320881   2111222333      213     6458937489576391093     0       3       2       http://www.example.ru/         0       800     600       16      10      2       153.1   0       0       10      63      1       1       0       0                       2111678 000       0       588     368     240     2011-09-01 01:03:17     4       0       60310   0       windows-1251    1466    0       000               778899001       0       0       0       0       0
...
108 109
%%

110
In other words, all the values related to a row are stored next to each other. Examples of a row-oriented DBMS are MySQL, Postgres, MS SQL Server, and others.
111 112

In a column-oriented DBMS, data is stored like this:
113

114
<pre class="text-example" style="white-space: pre; overflow-x: hidden">
115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122
<b>WatchID:</b>    5385521489354350662     5385521490329509958     5385521489953706054     5385521490476781638     5385521490583269446     5385521490218868806     5385521491437850694   5385521491090174022      5385521490792669254     5385521490420695110     5385521491532181574     5385521491559694406     5385521491459625030     5385521492275175494   5385521492781318214      5385521492710027334     5385521492955615302     5385521493708759110     5385521494506434630     5385521493104611398
<b>JavaEnable:</b> 1       0       1       0       0       0       1       0       1       1       1       1       1       1       0       1       0       0       1       1
<b>Title:</b>      Yandex  Announcements - Investor Relations - Yandex     Yandex — Contact us — Moscow    Yandex — Mission        Ru      Yandex — History — History of Yandex    Yandex Financial Releases - Investor Relations - Yandex Yandex — Locations      Yandex Board of Directors - Corporate Governance - Yandex       Yandex — Technologies
<b>GoodEvent:</b>  1       1       1       1       1       1       1       1       1       1       1       1       1       1       1       1       1       1       1       1
<b>EventTime:</b>  2016-05-18 05:19:20     2016-05-18 08:10:20     2016-05-18 07:38:00     2016-05-18 01:13:08     2016-05-18 00:04:06     2016-05-18 04:21:30     2016-05-18 00:34:16     2016-05-18 07:35:49     2016-05-18 11:41:59     2016-05-18 01:13:32
...
</pre>

123
These examples only show the order that data is arranged in.
124
The values from different columns are stored separately, and data from the same column is stored together.
125
Examples of a column-oriented DBMS: Vertica, Paraccel (Actian Matrix) (Amazon Redshift), Sybase IQ, Exasol, Infobright, InfiniDB, MonetDB (VectorWise) (Actian Vector), LucidDB, SAP HANA, Google Dremel, Google PowerDrill, Druid, kdb+ and others.
126

127 128

Different orders for storing data are better suited to different scenarios.
129
The data access scenario refers to what queries are made, how often, and in what proportion; how much data is read for each type of query - rows, columns, and bytes; the relationship between reading and updating data; the working size of the data and how locally it is used; whether transactions are used, and how isolated they are; requirements for data replication and logical integrity; requirements for latency and throughput for each type of query, and so on.
130 131 132 133

The higher the load on the system, the more important it is to customize the system to the scenario, and the more specific this customization becomes. There is no system that is equally well-suited to significantly different scenarios. If a system is adaptable to a wide set of scenarios, under a high load, the system will handle all the scenarios equally poorly, or will work well for just one of the scenarios.

We&#39;ll say that the following is true for the OLAP (online analytical processing) scenario:
134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146
- The vast majority of requests are for read access.
- Data is updated in fairly large batches (> 1000 rows), not by single rows; or it is not updated at all.
- Data is added to the DB but is not modified.
- For reads, quite a large number of rows are extracted from the DB, but only a small subset of columns.
- Tables are &quot;wide,&quot; meaning they contain a large number of columns.
- Queries are relatively rare (usually hundreds of queries per server or less per second).
- For simple queries, latencies around 50 ms are allowed.
- Column values are fairly small -  numbers and short strings (for example, 60 bytes per URL).
- Requires high throughput when processing a single query (up to billions of rows per second per server).
- There are no transactions.
- Low requirements for data consistency.
- There is one large table per query. All tables are small, except for one.
- A query result is significantly smaller than the source data. That is, data is filtered or aggregated. The result fits in a single server&#39;s RAM.
147 148 149 150 151 152

It is easy to see that the OLAP scenario is very different from other popular scenarios (such as OLTP or Key-Value access). So it doesn&#39;t make sense to try to use OLTP or a Key-Value DB for processing analytical queries if you want to get decent performance. For example, if you try to use MongoDB or Elliptics for analytics, you will get very poor performance compared to OLAP databases.

Columnar-oriented databases are better suited to OLAP scenarios (at least 100 times better in processing speed for most queries), for the following reasons:

1. For I/O.
153 154 155
1.1. For an analytical query, only a small number of table columns need to be read. In a column-oriented database, you can read just the data you need. For example, if you need 5 columns out of 100, you can expect a 20-fold reduction in I/O.
1.2. Since data is read in packets, it is easier to compress. Data in columns is also easier to compress. This further reduces the I/O volume.
1.3. Due to the reduced I/O, more data fits in the system cache.
156 157 158

For example, the query &quot;count the number of records for each advertising platform&quot; requires reading one &quot;advertising platform ID&quot; column, which takes up 1 byte uncompressed. If most of the traffic was not from advertising platforms, you can expect at least 10-fold compression of this column. When using a quick compression algorithm, data decompression is possible at a speed of at least several gigabytes of uncompressed data per second. In other words, this query can be processed at a speed of approximately several billion rows per second on a single server. This speed is actually achieved in practice.

159

160
<pre class="terminal show-example">
161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203
milovidov@████████.yandex.ru:~$ clickhouse-client
ClickHouse client version 0.0.52053.
Connecting to localhost:9000.
Connected to ClickHouse server version 0.0.52053.

:) SELECT CounterID, count() FROM hits GROUP BY CounterID ORDER BY count() DESC LIMIT 20

SELECT
    CounterID,
    count()
FROM hits
GROUP BY CounterID
ORDER BY count() DESC
LIMIT 20

┌─CounterID─┬──count()─┐
│    114208 │ 56057344 │
│    115080 │ 51619590 │
│      3228 │ 44658301 │
│     38230 │ 42045932 │
│    145263 │ 42042158 │
│     91244 │ 38297270 │
│    154139 │ 26647572 │
│    150748 │ 24112755 │
│    242232 │ 21302571 │
│    338158 │ 13507087 │
│     62180 │ 12229491 │
│     82264 │ 12187441 │
│    232261 │ 12148031 │
│    146272 │ 11438516 │
│    168777 │ 11403636 │
│   4120072 │ 11227824 │
│  10938808 │ 10519739 │
│     74088 │  9047015 │
│    115079 │  8837972 │
│    337234 │  8205961 │
└───────────┴──────────┘

20 rows in set. Elapsed: 0.153 sec. Processed 1.00 billion rows, 4.00 GB (6.53 billion rows/s., 26.10 GB/s.)

:)
</pre>

204
2. For CPU.
205 206
Since executing a query requires processing a large number of rows, it helps to dispatch all operations for entire vectors instead of for separate rows, or to implement the query engine so that there is almost no dispatching cost. If you don&#39;t do this, with any half-decent disk subsystem, the query interpreter inevitably stalls the CPU.
It makes sense to both store data in columns and process it, when possible, by columns.
207 208

There are two ways to do this:
209 210 211
1. A vector engine. All operations are written for vectors, instead of for separate values. This means you don&#39;t need to call operations very often, and dispatching costs are negligible. Operation code contains an optimized internal cycle.
2. Code generation. The code generated for the query has all the indirect calls in it.

212
This is not done in &quot;normal&quot; databases, because it doesn&#39;t make sense when running simple queries. However, there are exceptions. For example, MemSQL uses code generation to reduce latency when processing SQL queries. (For comparison, analytical DBMSs require optimization of throughput, not latency.)
213

214 215 216 217 218 219
Note that for CPU efficiency, the query language must be declarative (SQL or MDX), or at least a vector (J, K). The query should only contain implicit loops, allowing for optimization.


==Distinctive features of ClickHouse==

1. True column-oriented DBMS.
220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233
2. Data compression.
3. Disk storage of data.
4. Parallel processing on multiple cores.
5. Distributed processing on multiple servers.
6. SQL support.
7. Vector engine.
8. Real-time data updates.
9. Indexes.
10. Suitable for online queries.
11. Support for approximated calculations.
12. Support for nested data structures. Support for arrays as data types.
13. Support for restrictions on query complexity, along with quotas.
14. Data replication and support for data integrity on replicas.

234 235

Let&#39;s look at some of these features in detail.
236

237
<h3 class="not-for-contents">1. True column-oriented DBMS.</h3>
238

239
In a true column-oriented DBMS, there isn&#39;t any &quot;garbage&quot; stored with the values. For example, constant-length values must be supported, to avoid storing their length &quot;number&quot; next to the values. As an example, a billion UInt8-type values should actually consume around 1 GB uncompressed, or this will strongly affect the CPU use. It is very important to store data compactly (without any &quot;garbage&quot;) even when uncompressed, since the speed of decompression (CPU usage) depends mainly on the volume of uncompressed data.
240

241
This is worth noting because there are systems that can store values of separate columns separately, but that can&#39;t effectively process analytical queries due to their optimization for other scenarios. Example are HBase, BigTable, Cassandra, and HyperTable. In these systems, you will get throughput around a hundred thousand rows per second, but not hundreds of millions of rows per second.
242

243
Also note that ClickHouse is a DBMS, not a single database. ClickHouse allows creating tables and databases in runtime, loading data, and running queries without reconfiguring and restarting the server.
244

245
<h3 class="not-for-contents">2. Data compression.</h3>
246

247
Some column-oriented DBMSs (InfiniDB CE and MonetDB) do not use data compression. However, data compression really improves performance.
248

249
<h3 class="not-for-contents">3. Disk storage of data.</h3>
250

251
Many column-oriented DBMSs (SAP HANA, and Google PowerDrill) can only work in RAM. But even on thousands of servers, the RAM is too small for storing all the pageviews and sessions in Yandex.Metrica.
252

253
<h3 class="not-for-contents">4. Parallel processing on multiple cores.</h3>
254

255
Large queries are parallelized in a natural way.
256

257
<h3 class="not-for-contents">5. Distributed processing on multiple servers.</h3>
258

259 260
Almost none of the columnar DBMSs listed above have support for distributed processing.
In ClickHouse, data can reside on different shards. Each shard can be a group of replicas that are used for fault tolerance. The query is processed on all the shards in parallel. This is transparent for the user.
261

262
<h3 class="not-for-contents">6. SQL support.</h3>
263

264
If you are familiar with standard SQL, we can&#39;t really talk about SQL support.
265
NULLs are not supported. All the functions have different names. However, this is a declarative query language based on SQL that can&#39;t be differentiated from SQL in many instances.
266 267
JOINs are supported. Subqueries are supported in FROM, IN, JOIN clauses; and scalar subqueries.
Correllated subqueries are not supported.
268

269
<h3 class="not-for-contents">7. Vector engine.</h3>
270

271
Data is not only stored by columns, but is processed by vectors - parts of columns. This allows us to achieve high CPU performance.
272

273
<h3 class="not-for-contents">8. Real-time data updates.</h3>
274

275
ClickHouse supports primary key tables. In order to quickly perform queries on the range of the primary key, the data is sorted incrementally using the merge tree. Due to this, data can continually be added to the table. There is no locking when adding data.
276

277
<h3 class="not-for-contents">9. Indexes.</h3>
278

279
Having a primary key allows, for example, extracting data for specific clients (Metrica counters) for a specific time range, with low latency less than several dozen milliseconds.
280

281
<h3 class="not-for-contents">10. Suitable for online queries.</h3>
282

283
This lets us use the system as the back-end for a web interface. Low latency means queries can be processed without delay, while the Yandex.Metrica interface page is loading (in online mode).
284

285
<h3 class="not-for-contents">11. Support for approximated calculations.</h3>
286

287 288 289
1. The system contains aggregate functions for approximated calculation of the number of various values, medians, and quantiles.
2. Supports running a query based on a part (sample) of data and getting an approximated result. In this case, proportionally less data is retrieved from the disk.
3. Supports running an aggregation for a limited number of random keys, instead of for all keys. Under certain conditions for key distribution in the data, this provides a reasonably accurate result while using fewer resources.
290

291
<h3 class="not-for-contents">14. Data replication and support for data integrity on replicas.</h3>
292

293 294
Uses asynchronous multimaster replication. After being written to any available replica, data is distributed to all the remaining replicas. The system maintains identical data on different replicas. Data is restored automatically after a failure, or using a &quot;button&quot; for complex cases.
For more information, see the section &quot;Data replication&quot;.
295

296
==ClickHouse features that can be considered disadvantages==
297

298
1. No transactions.
299

300
2. For aggregation, query results must fit in the RAM on a single server. However, the volume of source data for a query may be indefinitely large.
301

302
3. Lack of full-fledged UPDATE/DELETE implementation.
303

304
==The Yandex.Metrica task==
305

306 307
We need to get custom reports based on hits and sessions, with custom segments set by the user. Data for the reports is updated in real-time. Queries must be run immediately (in online mode). We must be able to build reports for any time period. Complex aggregates must be calculated, such as the number of unique visitors.
At this time (April 2014), Yandex.Metrica receives approximately 12 billion events (pageviews and mouse clicks) daily. All these events must be stored in order to build custom reports. A single query may require scanning hundreds of millions of rows over a few seconds, or millions of rows in no more than a few hundred milliseconds.
308

309
===Aggregated and non-aggregated data===
310

311
There is a popular opinion that in order to effectively calculate statistics, you must aggregate data, since this reduces the volume of data.
312

313
But data aggregation is a very limited solution, for the following reasons:
314 315 316 317 318
- You must have a pre-defined list of reports the user will need. The user can&#39;t make custom reports.
- When aggregating a large quantity of keys, the volume of data is not reduced, and aggregation is useless.
- For a large number of reports, there are too many aggregation variations (combinatorial explosion).
- When aggregating keys with high cardinality (such as URLs), the volume of data is not reduced by much (less than twofold). For this reason, the volume of data with aggregation might grow instead of shrink.
- Users will not view all the reports we calculate for them. A large portion of calculations are useless.
319
- The logical integrity of data may be violated for various aggregations.
320

321
If we do not aggregate anything and work with non-aggregated data, this might actually reduce the volume of calculations.
322

323
However, with aggregation, a significant part of the work is taken offline and completed relatively calmly. In contrast, online calculations require calculating as fast as possible, since the user is waiting for the result.
324

325
Yandex.Metrica has a specialized system for aggregating data called Metrage, which is used for the majority of reports. Starting in 2009, Yandex.Metrica also used a specialized OLAP database for non-aggregated data called OLAPServer, which was previously used for the report builder. OLAPServer worked well for non-aggregated data, but it had many restrictions that did not allow it to be used for all reports as desired. These included the lack of support for data types (only numbers), and the inability to incrementally update data in real-time (it could only be done by rewriting data daily). OLAPServer is not a DBMS, but a specialized DB.
326

327
To remove the limitations of OLAPServer and solve the problem of working with non-aggregated data for all reports, we developed the ClickHouse DBMS.
328

329
==Usage in Yandex.Metrica and other Yandex services==
330

331
ClickHouse is used for multiple purposes in Yandex.Metrica. Its main task is to build reports in online mode using non-aggregated data. It uses a cluster of 374 servers, which store over 8 trillion rows (more than a quadrillion values) in the database. The volume of compressed data, without counting duplication and replication, is about 800 TB. The volume of uncompressed data (in TSV format) would be approximately 7 PB.
332

333
ClickHouse is also used for:
334 335 336 337 338 339 340
- Storing WebVisor data.
- Processing intermediate data.
- Building global reports with Analytics.
- Running queries for debugging the Metrica engine.
- Analyzing logs from the API and the user interface.


341
ClickHouse has at least a dozen installations in other Yandex services: in search verticals, Market, Direct, business analytics, mobile development, AdFox, personal services, and others.
342 343


344
==Possible counterparts==
345

346 347
There are no analogs to ClickHouse available.
At this time (May 2016), there aren&#39;t any available open-source and free systems that have all the features listed above. However, these features are absolutely necessary for Yandex.Metrica.
348 349


350
==Performance==
351

352
According to internal testing results, ClickHouse shows the best performance for comparable operating scenarios among systems of its class that were available for testing. This includes the highest throughput for long queries, and the lowest latency on short queries. Testing results are shown <a href="benchmark.html">on this page</a>.
353 354


355
===Throughput for a single large query===
356

357
Throughput can be measured in rows per second or in megabytes per second. If the data is placed in the page cache, a query that is not too complex is processed on modern hardware at a speed of approximately 2-10 GB/s of uncompressed data on a single server (for the simplest cases, the speed may reach 30 GB/s). If data is not placed in the page cache, the speed depends on the disk subsystem and the data compression rate. For example, if the disk subsystem allows reading data at 400 MB/s, and the data compression rate is 3, the speed will be around 1.2 GB/s. To get the speed in rows per second, divide the speed in bytes per second by the total size of the columns used in the query. For example, if 10 bytes of columns are extracted, the speed will be around 100-200 million rows per second.
358

359
The processing speed increases almost linearly for distributed processing, but only if the number of rows resulting from aggregation or sorting is not too large.
360

361
===Latency when processing short queries.===
362

363
If a query uses a primary key and does not select too many rows to process (hundreds of thousands), and does not use too many columns, we can expect less than 50 milliseconds of latency (single digits of milliseconds in the best case) if data is placed in the page cache. Otherwise, latency is calculated from the number of seeks. If you use rotating drives, for a system that is not overloaded, the latency is calculated by this formula: seek time (10 ms) * number of columns queried * number of data parts.
364

365
===Throughput when processing a large quantity of short queries.===
366

367 368 369 370 371
Under the same conditions, ClickHouse can handle several hundred queries per second on a single server (up to several thousand in the best case). Since this scenario is not typical for analytical DBMSs, we recommend expecting a maximum of 100 queries per second.

===Performance on data insertion.===

We recommend inserting data in packets of at least 1000 rows, or no more than a single request per second. When inserting to a MergeTree table from a tab-separated dump, the insertion speed will be from 50 to 200 MB/s. If the inserted rows are around 1 Kb in size, the speed will be from 50,000 to 200,000 rows per second. If the rows are small, the performance will be higher in rows per second (on Yandex Banner System data -> 500,000 rows per second, on Graphite data -> 1,000,000 rows per second). To improve performance, you can make multiple INSERT queries in parallel, and performance will increase linearly.
372 373 374

</div>

375
<div class="island">
376 377 378
<h1>Getting started</h1>
</div>

379
<div class="island content">
380

381
==System requirements==
382

383
This is not a cross-platform system. It requires Linux Ubuntu Precise (12.04) or newer, x86_64 architecture with SSE 4.2 instruction set.
384
To test for SSE 4.2 support, do
385
%%grep -q sse4_2 /proc/cpuinfo &amp;&amp; echo "SSE 4.2 supported" || echo "SSE 4.2 not supported"%%
386

387
We recommend using Ubuntu Trusty or Ubuntu Precise.
388
The terminal must use UTF-8 encoding (the default in Ubuntu).
389 390


391
==Installation==
392

393
For testing and development, the system can be installed on a single server or on a desktop computer.
394 395


396
===Installing from packages===
397

398
In %%/etc/apt/sources.list%% (or in a separate %%/etc/apt/sources.list.d/clickhouse.list%% file), add the repository:
399

400
On Ubuntu Trusty (14.04):
401

402
%%
403
deb http://repo.yandex.ru/clickhouse/trusty/ dists/stable/main/binary-amd64/
404
%%
405

406
On Ubuntu Precise (12.04):
407

408
%%
409
deb http://repo.yandex.ru/clickhouse/precise/ dists/stable/main/binary-amd64/
410
%%
411

412
Then run:
413

414
%%
415 416
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install clickhouse-client clickhouse-server-common
417
%%
418

419
You can also download and install packages manually from here: <a href="https://dist.yandex.ru/metrika/stable/amd64/">https://dist.yandex.ru/metrika/stable/amd64/</a>.
420

421 422
ClickHouse contains access restriction settings. They are located in the &#39;users.xml&#39; file (next to &#39;config.xml&#39;).
By default, access is allowed from everywhere for the default user without a password. See &#39;user/default/networks&#39;. For more information, see the section &quot;Configuration files&quot;.
423 424


O
Oleg Komarov 已提交
425
===Installing from source===
426

427
Build following the instructions in <a href="https://github.com/yandex/ClickHouse/blob/master/doc/build.md">build.md</a>
428

429
You can compile packages and install them. You can also use programs without installing packages.
430

431 432
Client: src/dbms/src/Client/
Server: src/dbms/src/Server/
433

434
For the server, create a catalog with data, such as:
435

436
%%
437 438
/opt/clickhouse/data/default/
/opt/clickhouse/metadata/default/
439
%%
440

441 442
(Configured in the server config.)
Run &#39;chown&#39; for the desired user.
443

444
Note the path to logs in the server config (src/dbms/src/Server/config.xml).
445 446


447
===Launch===
448

449
To start the server (as a daemon), run:
450

451
<pre class="terminal">
452 453 454
sudo service clickhouse-server start
</pre>

455
View the logs in the catalog
456

457
%%
458
/var/log/clickhouse-server/
459
%%
460

461
If the server doesn&#39;t start, check the configurations in the file
462

463
%%
464
/etc/clickhouse-server/config.xml
465
%%
466

467
You can also launch the server from the console:
468

469
<pre class="terminal">
470 471 472
clickhouse-server --config-file=/etc/clickhouse-server/config.xml
</pre>

473
In this case, the log will be printed to the console, which is convenient during development. If the configuration file is in the current directory, you don&#39;t need to specify the &#39;--config-file&#39; parameter. By default, it uses &#39;./config.xml&#39;.
474

475
You can use the command-line client to connect to the server:
476

477
<pre class="terminal">
478 479 480
clickhouse-client
</pre>

481 482
The default parameters indicate connecting with localhost:9000 on behalf of the user &#39;default&#39; without a password.
The client can be used for connecting to a remote server. For example:
483

484
<pre class="terminal">
485 486 487
clickhouse-client --host=example.com
</pre>

488
For more information, see the section &quot;Command-line client&quot;.
489

490
Checking the system:
491

492
<pre class="terminal">
493 494 495 496 497 498 499
milovidov@milovidov-Latitude-E6320:~/work/metrica/src/dbms/src/Client$ ./clickhouse-client
ClickHouse client version 0.0.18749.
Connecting to localhost:9000.
Connected to ClickHouse server version 0.0.18749.

:) SELECT 1

500
<i class="c15">SELECT</i> 1
501

502
┌─<i class="c15">1</i>─┐
503 504 505 506 507 508 509 510
│ 1 │
└───┘

1 rows in set. Elapsed: 0.003 sec.

:)
</pre>

511
Congratulations, it works!
512

513
==Test data==
514

515
If you are Yandex employee, you can use Yandex.Metrica test data to explore the system&#39;s capabilities. You can find instructions for using the test data <a href="https://github.yandex-team.ru/Metrika/ClickHouse_private/tree/master/tests">here</a>.
516

517
Otherwise, you could use one of available public datasets, described <a href="https://github.com/yandex/ClickHouse/tree/master/doc/example_datasets">here</a>.
518 519


520 521 522
==If you have questions==

If you are Yandex employee, use internal ClickHouse maillist.
523
You can subscribe to this list to get announcements, information on new developments, and questions that other users have.
524

525
Otherwise, you could ask questions on <a href="https://stackoverflow.com/">Stackoverflow</a> with 'clickhouse' tag; discuss in <a href="https://groups.google.com/group/clickhouse">Google Groups</a>; or send private message to developers to address <a href="mailto:clickhouse-feedback@yandex-team.com">clickhouse-feedback@yandex-team.com</a>.
526

527 528 529


</div>
530
<div class="island">
531 532 533
<h1>Interfaces</h1>
</div>

534
<div class="island content">
535

536
To explore the system&#39;s capabilities, download data to tables, or make manual queries, use the clickhouse-client program.
537 538


539
==HTTP interface==
540 541


542
The HTTP interface lets you use ClickHouse on any platform from any programming language. We use it for working from Java and Perl, as well as shell scripts. In other departments, the HTTP interface is used from Perl, Python, and Go. The HTTP interface is more limited than the native interface, but it has better compatibility.
543

544 545
By default, clickhouse-server listens for HTTP on port 8123 (this can be changed in the config).
If you make a GET / request without parameters, it returns the string &quot;Ok&quot; (with a line break at the end). You can use this in health-check scripts.
546

547
<pre class="terminal">
548 549 550 551
$ curl &#39;http://localhost:8123/&#39;
Ok.
</pre>

552
Send the request as a URL &#39;query&#39; parameter, or as a POST. Or send the beginning of the request in the &#39;query&#39; parameter, and the rest in the POST (we&#39;ll explain later why this is necessary).
553
If successful, you receive the 200 response code and the result in the response body.
554
If an error occurs, you receive the 500 response code and an error description text in the response body.
555

556
When using the GET method, &#39;readonly&#39; is set. In other words, for queries that modify data, you can only use the POST method. You can send the query itself either in the POST body, or in the URL parameter.
557

558
Examples:
559

560
<pre class="terminal">
561 562 563 564 565 566 567 568 569 570 571 572 573 574 575 576 577
$ curl &#39;http://localhost:8123/?query=SELECT%201&#39;
1

$ wget -O- -q &#39;http://localhost:8123/?query=SELECT 1&#39;
1

$ GET &#39;http://localhost:8123/?query=SELECT 1&#39;
1

$ echo -ne &#39;GET /?query=SELECT%201 HTTP/1.0\r\n\r\n&#39; | nc localhost 8123
HTTP/1.0 200 OK
Connection: Close
Date: Fri, 16 Nov 2012 19:21:50 GMT

1
</pre>

578
As you can see, curl is not very convenient because spaces have to be URL-escaped. Although wget escapes everything on its own, we don&#39;t recommend it because it doesn&#39;t work well over HTTP 1.1 when using keep-alive and Transfer-Encoding: chunked.
579

580
<pre class="terminal">
581 582 583 584 585 586 587 588 589 590
$ echo &#39;SELECT 1&#39; | curl &#39;http://localhost:8123/&#39; --data-binary @-
1

$ echo &#39;SELECT 1&#39; | curl &#39;http://localhost:8123/?query=&#39; --data-binary @-
1

$ echo &#39;1&#39; | curl &#39;http://localhost:8123/?query=SELECT&#39; --data-binary @-
1
</pre>

591 592
If part of the query is sent in the parameter, and part in the POST, a line break is inserted between these two data parts.
Example (this won&#39;t work):
593

594
<pre class="terminal">
595 596 597 598 599 600
$ echo &#39;ECT 1&#39; | curl &#39;http://localhost:8123/?query=SEL&#39; --data-binary @-
Code: 59, e.displayText() = DB::Exception: Syntax error: failed at position 0: SEL
ECT 1
, expected One of: SHOW TABLES, SHOW DATABASES, SELECT, INSERT, CREATE, ATTACH, RENAME, DROP, DETACH, USE, SET, OPTIMIZE., e.what() = DB::Exception
</pre>

601 602
By default, data is returned in TabSeparated format (for more information, see the &quot;Formats&quot; section).
You use the FORMAT clause of the query to request any other format.
603

604
<pre class="terminal">
605 606 607 608 609 610 611 612
$ echo &#39;SELECT 1 FORMAT Pretty&#39; | curl &#39;http://localhost:8123/?&#39; --data-binary @-
┏━━━┓
┃ 1 ┃
┡━━━┩
│ 1 │
└───┘
</pre>

613
The POST method of transmitting data is necessary for INSERT queries. In this case, you can write the beginning of the query in the URL parameter, and use POST to pass the data to insert. The data to insert could be, for example, a tab-separated dump from MySQL. In this way, the INSERT query replaces LOAD DATA LOCAL INFILE from MySQL.
614

615
Examples:
616

617
Creating a table:
618

619
<pre class="terminal">
620 621 622
echo &#39;CREATE TABLE t (a UInt8) ENGINE = Memory&#39; | POST &#39;http://localhost:8123/&#39;
</pre>

623
Using the familiar INSERT query for data insertion:
624

625
<pre class="terminal">
626 627 628
echo &#39;INSERT INTO t VALUES (1),(2),(3)&#39; | POST &#39;http://localhost:8123/&#39;
</pre>

629
Data can be sent separately from the query:
630

631
<pre class="terminal">
632 633 634
echo &#39;(4),(5),(6)&#39; | POST &#39;http://localhost:8123/?query=INSERT INTO t VALUES&#39;
</pre>

635
You can specify any data format. The &#39;Values&#39; format is the same as what is used when writing INSERT INTO t VALUES:
636

637
<pre class="terminal">
638 639 640
echo &#39;(7),(8),(9)&#39; | POST &#39;http://localhost:8123/?query=INSERT INTO t FORMAT Values&#39;
</pre>

641
To insert data from a tab-separated dump, specify the corresponding format:
642

643
<pre class="terminal">
644 645 646
echo -ne &#39;10\n11\n12\n&#39; | POST &#39;http://localhost:8123/?query=INSERT INTO t FORMAT TabSeparated&#39;
</pre>

647
Reading the table contents. Data is output in random order due to parallel query processing:
648

649
<pre class="terminal">
650 651 652 653 654 655 656 657 658 659 660 661 662 663 664
$ GET &#39;http://localhost:8123/?query=SELECT a FROM t&#39;
7
8
9
10
11
12
1
2
3
4
5
6
</pre>

665
Deleting the table.
666

667
<pre class="terminal">
668 669 670
POST &#39;http://localhost:8123/?query=DROP TABLE t&#39;
</pre>

671
For successful requests that don&#39;t return a data table, an empty response body is returned.
672

673
You can use compression when transmitting data. The compressed data has a non-standard format, and you will need to use a special compressor program to work with it (%%sudo apt-get install compressor-metrika-yandex%%).
674

675 676
If you specified &#39;compress=1&#39; in the URL, the server will compress the data it sends you.
If you specified &#39;decompress=1&#39; in the URL, the server will decompress the same data that you pass in the POST method.
677

678
You can use this to reduce network traffic when transmitting a large amount of data, or for creating dumps that are immediately compressed.
679

680
You can use the &#39;database&#39; URL parameter to specify the default database.
681

682
<pre class="terminal">
683 684 685 686 687 688 689 690 691 692 693 694 695
$ echo &#39;SELECT number FROM numbers LIMIT 10&#39; | curl &#39;http://localhost:8123/?database=system&#39; --data-binary @-
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
</pre>

696
By default, the database that is registered in the server settings is used as the default database. By default, this is the database called &#39;default&#39;. Alternatively, you can always specify the database using a dot before the table name.
697

698
The username and password can be indicated in one of two ways:
699
1. Using HTTP Basic Authentication. Example:
700
<pre class="terminal">
701 702 703
echo &#39;SELECT 1&#39; | curl &#39;http://user:password@localhost:8123/&#39; -d @-
</pre>
2. In the &#39;user&#39; and &#39;password&#39; URL parameters. Example:
704
<pre class="terminal">
705 706 707 708 709
echo &#39;SELECT 1&#39; | curl &#39;http://localhost:8123/?user=user&amp;password=password&#39; -d @-
</pre>
If the user name is not indicated, the username &#39;default&#39; is used. If the password is not indicated, an empty password is used.


710
You can also use the URL parameters to specify any settings for processing a single query, or entire profiles of settings. Example:
711

712 713 714
%%http://localhost:8123/?profile=web&amp;max_rows_to_read=1000000000&amp;query=SELECT+1%%

For more information, see the section &quot;Settings&quot;.
715

716
<pre class="terminal">
717 718 719 720 721 722 723 724 725 726 727 728 729
$ echo &#39;SELECT number FROM system.numbers LIMIT 10&#39; | curl &#39;http://localhost:8123/?&#39; --data-binary @-
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
</pre>

730
For information about other parameters, see the section &quot;SET&quot;.
731

732
In contrast to the native interface, the HTTP interface does not support the concept of sessions or session settings, does not allow aborting a query (to be exact, it allows this in only a few cases),  and does not show the progress of query processing. Parsing and data formatting are performed on the server side, and using the network might be ineffective.
733

734
The optional &#39;query_id&#39; parameter can be passed as the query ID (any string). For more information, see the section &quot;Settings, replace_running_query&quot;.
735

736
The optional &#39;quota_key&#39; parameter can be passed as the quota key (any string). For more information, see the section &quot;Quotas&quot;.
737

738
The HTTP interface allows passing external data (external temporary tables) for querying. For more information, see the section &quot;External data for query processing&quot;.
739 740


741
==Native interface (TCP)==
742 743 744

The native interface is used in the &quot;clickhouse-client&quot; command-line client for interaction between servers with distributed query processing, and also in C++ programs. We will only cover the command-line client.

745
==Command-line client==
746

747
<pre class="terminal">
748 749 750 751 752 753 754 755
$ clickhouse-client
ClickHouse client version 0.0.26176.
Connecting to localhost:9000.
Connected to ClickHouse server version 0.0.26176.

:) SELECT 1
</pre>

756
The &quot;clickhouse-client&quot; program accepts the following parameters, which are all optional:
757

758 759
--host, -h - server name, by default - &#39;localhost&#39;.
You can use either the name or the IPv4 or IPv6 address.
760

761 762
--port - The port to connect to, by default - &#39;9000&#39;.
Note that the HTTP interface and the native interface use different ports.
763

764
--user, -u - The username, by default - &#39;default&#39;.
765

766
--password - The password, by default - empty string.
767

768
--query, -q - Query to process when using non-interactive mode.
769

770
--database, -d - Select the current default database, by default - the current DB from the server settings (by default, the &#39;default&#39; DB).
771

772
--multiline, -m - If specified, allow multiline queries (do not send request on Enter).
773

774 775
--multiquery, -n - If specified, allow processing multiple queries separated by semicolons.
Only works in non-interactive mode.
776

777
--format, -f - Use the specified default format to output the result.
778

779
--vertical, -E - If specified, use the Vertical format by default to output the result. This is the same as &#39;--format=Vertical&#39;. In this format, each value is printed on a separate line, which is helpful when displaying wide tables.
780

781
--time, -t - If specified, print the query execution time to &#39;stderr&#39; in non-interactive mode.
782

783
--stacktrace - If specified, also prints the stack trace if an exception occurs.
784

785
--config-file - Name of the configuration file that has additional settings or changed defaults for the settings listed above.
786 787 788 789
By default, files are searched for in this order:
./clickhouse-client.xml
~/./clickhouse-client/config.xml
/etc/clickhouse-client/config.xml
790
Settings are only taken from the first file found.
791

792
You can also specify any settings that will be used for processing queries. For example, %%clickhouse-client --max_threads=1%%. For more information, see the section &quot;Settings&quot;.
793

794
The client can be used in interactive and non-interactive (batch) mode.
795 796
To use batch mode, specify the &#39;query&#39; parameter, or send data to &#39;stdin&#39; (it verifies that &#39;stdin&#39; is not a terminal), or both.
Similar to the HTTP interface, when using the &#39;query&#39; parameter and sending data to &#39;stdin&#39;, the request is a concatenation of the &#39;query&#39; parameter, a line break, and the data in &#39;stdin&#39;. This is convenient for large INSERT queries.
797
In batch mode, the default data format is TabSeparated. You can set the format in the FORMAT clause of the query.
798

799 800
By default, you can only process a single query in batch mode. To make multiple queries from a &quot;script,&quot; use the &#39;multiquery&#39; parameter. This works for all queries except INSERT. Query results are output consecutively without additional separators.
Similarly, to process a large number of queries, you can run &#39;clickhouse-client&#39; for each query. Note that it may take tens of milliseconds to launch the &#39;clickhouse-client&#39; program.
801

802
In interactive mode, you get a command line where you can enter queries.
803 804

If &#39;multiline&#39; is not specified (the default):
805
To run a query, press Enter. The semicolon is not necessary at the end of the query. To enter a multiline query, enter a backslash %%\%% before the line break - after you press Enter, you will be asked to enter the next line of the query.
806 807 808 809

If &#39;multiline&#39; is specified:
To run a query, end it with a semicolon and press Enter. If the semicolon was omitted at the end of the entered line, you will be asked to enter the next line of the query.

810
Only a single query is run, so everything after the semicolon is ignored.
811

812
You can specify %%\G%% instead of or after the semicolon. This indicates using Vertical format. In this format, each value is printed on a separate line, which is convenient for wide tables. This unusual feature was added for compatibility with the MySQL CLI.
813

814
The command line is based on &#39;readline&#39; (and &#39;history&#39;) (or &#39;libedit&#39;, or even nothing, depending on build). In other words, it uses the familiar keyboard shortcuts and keeps a history. The history is written to /.clickhouse-client-history.
815

816
By default, the format used is PrettyCompact. You can change the format in the FORMAT clause of the query, or by specifying &#39;\G&#39; at the end of the query, using the &#39;--format&#39; or &#39;--vertical&#39; argument in the command line, or using the client configuration file.
817

818 819
To exit the client, press Ctrl+D (or Ctrl+C), or enter one of the following :
&quot;exit&quot;, &quot;quit&quot;, &quot;logout&quot;, &quot;учше&quot;, &quot;йгше&quot;, &quot;дщпщге&quot;, &quot;exit;&quot;, &quot;quit;&quot;, &quot;logout;&quot;, &quot;учшеж&quot;, &quot;йгшеж&quot;, &quot;дщпщгеж&quot;, &quot;q&quot;, &quot;й&quot;, &quot;\q&quot;, &quot;\Q&quot;, &quot;:q&quot;, &quot;&quot;, &quot;&quot;, &quot;Жй&quot;
820

821
When processing a query, the client shows:
822 823 824
1. Progress, which is updated no more than 10 times per second (by default). For quick queries, the progress might not have time to be displayed.
2. The formatted query after parsing, for debugging.
3. The result in the specified format.
825
4. The number of lines in the result, the time passed, and the average speed of query processing.
826

827
To cancel a lengthy query, press Ctrl+C. However, you will still need to wait a little for the server to abort the request. It is not possible to cancel a query at certain stages. If you don&#39;t wait and press Ctrl+C a second time, the client will exit.
828

829
The command-line client allows passing external data (external temporary tables) for querying. For more information, see the section &quot;External data for request processing&quot;.
830 831 832


</div>
833
<div class="island">
834 835 836
<h1>Query language</h1>
</div>

837
<div class="island content">
838

839
==Syntax==
840

O
Oleg Komarov 已提交
841
There are two types of parsers in the system: a full SQL parser (a recursive descent parser), and a data format parser (a fast stream parser). In all cases except the INSERT query, only the full SQL parser is used.
842
The INSERT query uses both parsers:
843

844
%%INSERT INTO t VALUES (1, &#39;Hello, world&#39;), (2, &#39;abc&#39;), (3, &#39;def&#39;)%%
845

846 847
The %%INSERT INTO t VALUES%% fragment is parsed by the full parser, and the data %%(1, &#39;Hello, world&#39;), (2, &#39;abc&#39;), (3, &#39;def&#39;)%% is parsed by the fast stream parser.
Data can have any format. When a query is received, the server calculates no more than &#39;max_query_size&#39; bytes of the request in RAM (by default, 1 MB), and the rest is stream parsed. This means the system doesn&#39;t have problems with large INSERT queries, like MySQL does.
848

849
When using the Values format in an INSERT query, it may seem that data is parsed the same as expressions in a SELECT query, but this is not true. The Values format is much more limited.
850

851
Next we will cover the full parser. For more information about format parsers, see the section &quot;Formats&quot;.
852

853
===Spaces===
854

855
There may be any number of space symbols between syntactical constructions (including the beginning and end of a query). Space symbols include the space, tab, line break, CR, and form feed.
856

857
===Comments===
858

859 860 861
SQL-style and C-style comments are supported.
SQL-style comments: from %%--%% to the end of the line. The space after %%--%% can be omitted.
C-style comments: from %%/*%% to %%*/%%. These comments can be multiline. Spaces are not required here, either.
862

863
===Keywords===
864

865
Keywords (such as SELECT) are not case-sensitive. Everything else (column names, functions, and so on), in contrast to standard SQL, is case-sensitive. Keywords are not reserved (they are just parsed as keywords in the corresponding context).
866

867
===Identifiers===
868

869 870 871 872
Identifiers (column names, functions, and data types) can be quoted or non-quoted.
Non-quoted identifiers start with a Latin letter or underscore, and continue with a Latin letter, underscore, or number. In other words, they must match the regex %%^[a-zA-Z_][0-9a-zA-Z_]*$%%. Examples: %%x%%, %%_1%%, %%X_y__Z123_%%.
Quoted identifiers are placed in reversed quotation marks %%`id`%% (the same as in MySQL), and can indicate any set of bytes (non-empty). In addition, symbols (for example, the reverse quotation mark) inside this type of identifier can be backslash-escaped. Escaping rules are the same as for string literals (see below).
We recommend using identifiers that do not need to be quoted.
873

874
===Literals===
875

876
There are numeric literals, string literals, and compound literals.
877 878 879

<h4>Numeric literals</h4>

880
A numeric literal tries to be parsed:
881 882 883
- first as a 64-bit signed number, using the &#39;strtoull&#39; function.
- if unsuccessful, as a 64-bit unsigned number, using the &#39;strtoll&#39; function.
- if unsuccessful, as a floating-point number using the &#39;strtod&#39; function.
884
- otherwise, an error is returned.
885

886 887
The corresponding value will have the smallest type that the value fits in.
For example, 1 is parsed as UInt8, but 256 is parsed as UInt16. For more information, see &quot;Data types&quot;.
888

889
Examples: %%1%%, %%18446744073709551615%%, %%0xDEADBEEF%%, %%01%%, %%0.1%%, %%1e100%%, %%-1e-100%%, %%inf%%, %%nan%%.
890 891 892

<h4>String literals</h4>

893
Only string literals in single quotes are supported. The enclosed characters can be backslash-escaped. The following escape sequences have special meanings: %%\b%%, %%\f%%, %%\r%%, %%\n%%, %%\t%%, %%\0%%. In all other cases, escape sequences like <span class="inline-example">\<i>x</i></span>, where <i>x</i> is any character, are transformed to <i>x</i>. This means that the sequences %%\&#39;%% and %%\\%% can be used. The value will have the String type.
894 895 896

<h4>Compound literals</h4>

897
Constructions are supported for arrays: %%[1, 2, 3]%% and tuples: %%(1, &#39;Hello, world!&#39;, 2)%%.
898 899
Actually, these are not literals, but expressions with the array creation operator and the tuple creation operator, respectively. For more information, see the section &quot;Operators2&quot;.
An array must consist of at least one item, and a tuple must have at least two items.
900
Tuples have a special purpose for use in the IN clause of a SELECT query. Tuples can be obtained as the result of a query, but they can&#39;t be saved to a database (with the exception of Memory-type tables).
901

902
===Functions===
903

904 905
Functions are written like an identifier with a list of arguments (possibly empty) in brackets. In contrast to standard SQL, the brackets are required, even for an empty arguments list. Example: %%now()%%.
There are regular and aggregate functions (see the section &quot;Aggregate functions&quot;). Some aggregate functions can contain two lists of arguments in brackets. Example: %%quantile(0.9)(x)%%. These aggregate functions are called &quot;parametric&quot; functions, and the arguments in the first list are called &quot;parameters&quot;. The syntax of aggregate functions without parameters is the same as for regular functions.
906

907
===Operators===
908

909 910 911
Operators are converted to their corresponding functions during query parsing, taking their priority and associativity into account.
For example, the expression %%1 + 2 * 3 + 4%% is transformed to %%plus(plus(1, multiply(2, 3)), 4)%%.
For more information, see the section &quot;Operators2&quot; below.
912

913
===Data types and database table engines===
914

915
Data types and table engines in the CREATE query are written the same way as identifiers or functions. In other words, they may or may not contain an arguments list in brackets. For more information, see the sections &quot;Data types,&quot; &quot;Table engines,&quot; and &quot;CREATE&quot;.
916

917
===Synonyms===
918

919
In the SELECT query, expressions can specify synonyms using the AS keyword. Any expression is placed to the left of AS. The identifier name for the synonym is placed to the right of AS. As opposed to standard SQL, synonyms are not only declared on the top level of expressions:
920

921
%%SELECT (1 AS n) + 2, n%%
922

923
In contrast to standard SQL, synonyms can be used in all parts of a query, not just SELECT.
924

925
===Asterisk===
926

927
In a SELECT query, an asterisk can replace the expression. For more information, see the section &quot;SELECT&quot;.
928

929
===Expressions===
930

931
An expression is a function, identifier, literal, application of an operator, expression in brackets, subquery, or asterisk. It can also contain a synonym.
932
A list of expressions is one or more expressions separated by commas.
933
Functions and operators, in turn, can have expressions as arguments.
934 935


936
==Queries==
937 938


939
===CREATE DATABASE===
940

941
%%CREATE DATABASE [IF NOT EXISTS] db_name%%
942

943 944
- Creates the &#39;db_name&#39; database. A database is just a directory for tables.
If &quot;IF NOT EXISTS&quot; is included, the query won&#39;t return an error if the database already exists.
945

946
===CREATE TABLE===
947

948
The CREATE TABLE query can have several forms.
949

950
%%CREATE [TEMPORARY] TABLE [IF NOT EXISTS] [db.]name
951 952 953 954
(
    name1 [type1] [DEFAULT|MATERIALIZED|ALIAS expr1],
    name2 [type2] [DEFAULT|MATERIALIZED|ALIAS expr2],
    ...
955
) ENGINE = engine%%
956

957
Creates a table named &#39;name&#39; in the &#39;db&#39; database or the current database if &#39;db&#39; is not set, with the structure specified in brackets and the &#39;engine&#39; engine. The structure of the table is a list of column descriptions. If indexes are supported by the engine, they are indicated as parameters for the table engine.
958

959 960
A column description is %%name type%% in the simplest case. For example: %%RegionID UInt32%%.
Expressions can also be defined for default values (see below).
961

962
%%CREATE [TEMPORARY] TABLE [IF NOT EXISTS] [db.]name AS [db2.]name2 [ENGINE = engine]%%
963

964
Creates a table with the same structure as another table. You can specify a different engine for the table. If the engine is not specified, the same engine will be used as for the &#39;db2.name2&#39; table.
965

966
%%CREATE [TEMPORARY] TABLE [IF NOT EXISTS] [db.]name ENGINE = engine AS SELECT ...%%
967

968
Creates a table with a structure like the result of the SELECT query, with the &#39;engine&#39; engine, and fills it with data from SELECT.
969

970
In all cases, if IF NOT EXISTS is specified, the query won&#39;t return an error if the table already exists. In this case, the query won&#39;t do anything.
971 972 973

<h4>Default values</h4>

974 975 976
The column description can specify an expression for a default value, in one of the following ways:
%%DEFAULT expr%%, %%MATERIALIZED expr%%, %%ALIAS expr%%.
Example: %%URLDomain String DEFAULT domain(URL)%%.
977

978
If an expression for the default value is not defined, the default values will be set to zeros for numbers, empty strings for strings, empty arrays for arrays, and 0000-00-00 for dates or 0000-00-00 00:00:00 for dates with time. NULLs are not supported.
979

980
If the default expression is defined, the column type is optional. If there isn&#39;t an explicitly defined type, the default expression type is used. Example: %%EventDate DEFAULT toDate(EventTime)%% - the &#39;Date&#39; type will be used for the &#39;EventDate&#39; column.
981

982
If the data type and default expression are defined explicitly, this expression will be cast to the specified type using type casting functions. Example: %%Hits UInt32 DEFAULT 0%% means the same thing as %%Hits UInt32 DEFAULT toUInt32(0)%%.
983

984
Default expressions may be defined as an arbitrary expression from table constants and columns. When creating and changing the table structure, it checks that expressions don&#39;t contain loops. For INSERT, it checks that expressions are resolvable - that all columns they can be calculated from have been passed.
985

986
%%DEFAULT expr%%
987

988
Normal default value. If the INSERT query doesn&#39;t specify the corresponding column, it will be filled in by computing the corresponding expression.
989

990
%%MATERIALIZED expr%%
991

992
Materialized expression. Such a column can&#39;t be specified for INSERT, because it is always calculated.
993
For an INSERT without a list of columns, these columns are not considered.
994
In addition, this column is not substituted when using an asterisk in a SELECT query. This is to preserve the invariant that the dump obtained using SELECT * can be inserted back into the table using INSERT without specifying the list of columns.
995

996
%%ALIAS expr%%
997

998
Synonym. Such a column isn&#39;t stored in the table at all.
999
Its values can&#39;t be inserted in a table, and it is not substituted when using an asterisk in a SELECT query.
1000
It can be used in SELECTs if the alias is expanded during query parsing.
1001

1002
When using the ALTER query to add new columns, old data for these columns is not written. Instead, when reading old data that does not have values for the new columns, expressions are computed on the fly by default. However, if running the expressions requires different columns that are not indicated in the query, these columns will additionally be read, but only for the blocks of data that need it.
1003

1004
If you add a new column to a table but later change its default expression, the values used for old data will change (for data where values were not stored on the disk). Note that when running background merges, data for columns that are missing in one of the merging parts is written to the merged part.
1005

1006
It is not possible to set default values for elements in nested data structures.
1007 1008 1009 1010


<h4>Temporary tables</h4>

1011
In all cases, if TEMPORARY is specified, a temporary table will be created. Temporary tables have the following characteristics:
1012 1013 1014 1015
- Temporary tables disappear when the session ends, including if the connection is lost.
- A temporary table is created with the Memory engine. The other table engines are not supported.
- The DB can&#39;t be specified for a temporary table. It is created outside of databases.
- If a temporary table has the same name as another one and a query specifies the table name without specifying the DB, the temporary table will be used.
1016
- For distributed query processing, temporary tables used in a query are passed to remote servers.
1017

1018
In most cases, temporary tables are not created manually, but when using external data for a query, or for distributed (GLOBAL) IN. For more information, see the appropriate sections.
1019

1020
===CREATE VIEW===
1021

1022
%%CREATE [MATERIALIZED] VIEW [IF NOT EXISTS] [db.]name [ENGINE = engine] [POPULATE] AS SELECT ...%%
1023

1024
Creates a view. There are two types of views: normal and MATERIALIZED.
1025

1026
Normal views don&#39;t store any data, but just perform a read from another table. In other words, a normal view is nothing more than a saved query. When reading from a view, this saved query is used as a subquery in the FROM clause.
1027 1028

As an example, assume you&#39;ve created a view:
1029
%%CREATE VIEW view AS SELECT ...%%
1030
and written a query:
1031
%%SELECT a, b, c FROM view%%
1032
This query is fully equivalent to using the subquery:
1033
%%SELECT a, b, c FROM (SELECT ...)%%
1034

1035 1036

Materialized views store data transformed by the corresponding SELECT query.
1037 1038 1039 1040 1041 1042 1043 1044 1045

When creating a materialized view, you can specify ENGINE - the table engine for storing data. By default, it uses the same engine as for the table that the SELECT query is made from.

A materialized view is arranged as follows: when inserting data to the table specified in SELECT, part of the inserted data is converted by this SELECT query, and the result is inserted in the view.

If you specify POPULATE, the existing table data is inserted in the view when creating it, as if making a CREATE TABLE ... AS SELECT ... query. Otherwise, the query contains only the data inserted in the table after creating the view. We don&#39;t recommend using POPULATE, since data inserted in the table during the view creation will not be inserted in it.

The SELECT query can contain DISTINCT, GROUP BY, ORDER BY, LIMIT ... Note that the corresponding conversions are performed independently on each block of inserted data. For example, if GROUP BY is set, data is aggregated during insertion, but only within a single packet of inserted data. The data won&#39;t be further aggregated. The exception is when using an ENGINE that independently performs data aggregation, such as SummingMergeTree.

1046
The execution of ALTER queries on materialized views has not been fully developed, so they might be inconvenient.
1047

1048
Views look the same as normal tables. For example, they are listed in the result of the SHOW TABLES query.
1049

1050
There isn&#39;t a separate query for deleting views. To delete a view, use DROP TABLE.
1051

1052
===ATTACH===
1053

1054
The query is exactly the same as CREATE, except
1055 1056
- The word ATTACH is used instead of CREATE.
- The query doesn&#39;t create data on the disk, but assumes that data is already in the appropriate places, and just adds information about the table to the server.
1057
After executing an ATTACH query, the server will know about the existence of the table.
1058

1059
This query is used when starting the server. The server stores table metadata as files with ATTACH queries, which it simply runs at launch (with the exception of system tables, which are explicitly created on the server).
1060 1061


1062
===DROP===
1063

1064
This query has two types: DROP DATABASE and DROP TABLE.
1065

1066
%%DROP DATABASE [IF EXISTS] db%%
1067

1068 1069
Deletes all tables inside the &#39;db&#39; database, then deletes the &#39;db&#39; database itself.
If IF EXISTS is specified, it doesn&#39;t return an error if the database doesn&#39;t exist.
1070

1071
%%DROP TABLE [IF EXISTS] [db.]name%%
1072

1073 1074
Deletes the table.
If IF EXISTS is specified, it doesn&#39;t return an error if the table doesn&#39;t exist or the database doesn&#39;t exist.
1075 1076


1077
===DETACH===
1078

1079
%%DETACH TABLE [IF EXISTS] [db.]name%%
1080

1081
Deletes information about the table from the server. The server stops knowing about the table&#39;s existence. This does not delete the table&#39;s data or metadata. On the next server launch, the server will read the metadata and find out about the table again. Similarly, a &quot;detached&quot; table can be re-attached using the ATTACH query (with the exception of system tables, which do not have metadata stored for them).
1082

1083
There is no DETACH DATABASE query.
1084 1085


1086
===RENAME===
1087

1088
%%RENAME TABLE [db11.]name11 TO [db12.]name12, [db21.]name21 TO [db22.]name22, ...%%
1089

1090
Renames one or more tables. All tables are renamed under global locking. Renaming tables is a light operation. If you indicated another database after TO, the table will be moved to this database. However, the directories with databases must reside in the same file system (otherwise, an error is returned).
1091 1092


1093
===ALTER===
1094

1095
The ALTER query is only supported for *MergeTree type tables, as well as for Merge and Distributed types. The query has several variations.
1096 1097 1098

<h4>Column manipulations</h4>

1099
%%ALTER TABLE [db].name ADD|DROP|MODIFY COLUMN ...%%
1100

1101
Lets you change the table structure. In the query, specify a list of one or more comma-separated actions. Each action is an operation on a column.
1102

1103
The following actions are supported:
1104

1105
%%ADD COLUMN name [type] [default_expr] [AFTER name_after]%%
1106

1107
Adds a new column to the table with the specified name, type, and default expression (see the section &quot;Default expressions&quot;). If you specify &#39;AFTER name_after&#39; (the name of another column), the column is added after the specified one in the list of table columns. Otherwise, the column is added to the end of the table. Note that there is no way to add a column to the beginning of a table. For a chain of actions, &#39;name_after&#39; can be the name of a column that is added in one of the previous actions.
1108

1109
Adding a column just changes the table structure, without performing any actions with data. The data doesn&#39;t appear on the disk after ALTER. If the data is missing for a column when reading from the table, it is filled in with default values (by performing the default expression if there is one, or using zeros or empty strings). The column appears on the disk after merging data parts (see MergeTree).
1110

1111
This approach allows us to complete the ALTER query instantly, without increasing the volume of old data.
1112

1113
%%DROP COLUMN name%%
1114

1115
Deletes the column with the name &#39;name&#39;.
1116

1117
Deletes data from the file system. Since this deletes entire files, the query is completed almost instantly.
1118

1119
%%MODIFY COLUMN name [type] [default_expr]%%
1120

1121
Changes the &#39;name&#39; column&#39;s type to &#39;type&#39; and/or the default expression to &#39;default_expr&#39;. When changing the type, values are converted as if the &#39;to<i>Type</i>&#39; function were applied to them.
1122

1123
If only the default expression is changed, the query doesn&#39;t do anything complex, and is completed almost instantly.
1124

1125
Changing the column type is the only complex action - it changes the contents of files with data. For large tables, this may take a long time.
1126

1127
There are several stages of execution:
1128 1129 1130
- Preparing temporary (new) files with modified data.
- Renaming old files.
- Renaming the temporary (new) files to the old names.
1131
- Deleting the old files.
1132

1133 1134
Only the first stage takes time. If there is a failure at this stage, the data is not changed.
If there is a failure during one of the successive stages, data can be restored manually. The exception is if the old files were deleted from the file system but the data for the new files did not get written to the disk and was lost.
1135

1136
There is no support for changing the column type in arrays and nested data structures.
1137

1138
The ALTER query lets you create and delete separate elements (columns) in nested data structures, but not whole nested data structures. To add a nested data structure, you can add columns with a name like &#39;name.nested_name&#39; and the type &#39;Array(<i>T</i>)&#39;. A nested data structure is equivalent to multiple array columns with a name that has the same prefix before the dot.
1139

1140
There is no support for deleting or changing the type for columns in the primary key or the sampling key (columns that are in the ENGINE expression).
1141

1142
If the ALTER query is not sufficient for making the table changes you need, you can create a new table, copy the data to it using the INSERT SELECT query, then switch the tables using the RENAME query and delete the old table.
1143

1144
The ALTER query blocks all reads and writes for the table. In other words, if a long SELECT is running at the time of the ALTER query, the ALTER query will wait for the SELECT to complete. At the same time, all new queries to the same table will wait while this ALTER is running.
1145

1146
For tables that don&#39;t store data themselves (Merge and Distributed), ALTER just changes the table structure, and does not change the structure of subordinate tables. For example, when running ALTER for a Distributed table, you will also need to run ALTER for the tables on all remote servers.
1147

1148
The ALTER query for changing columns is replicated. The instructions are saved in ZooKeeper, then each replica applies them. All ALTER queries are run in the same order. The query waits for the appropriate actions to be completed on the other replicas. However, a query to change columns in a replicated table can be interrupted, and all actions will be performed asynchronously.
1149 1150 1151 1152


<h4>Manipulations with partitions and parts</h4>

1153
Only works for tables in the MergeTree family. The following operations are available:
1154

1155 1156 1157 1158 1159
%%DETACH PARTITION%% - Move a partition to the &#39;detached&#39; directory and forget it.
%%DROP PARTITION%% - Delete a partition.
%%ATTACH PART|PARTITION%% - Add a new part or partition from the &#39;detached&#39; directory to the table.
%%FREEZE PARTITION%% - Create a backup of a partition.
%%FETCH PARTITION%% - Download a partition from another server.
1160

1161
Each type of query is covered separately below.
1162

1163
A partition in a table is data for a single calendar month. This is determined by the values of the date key specified in the table engine parameters. Each month&#39;s data is stored separately in order to simplify manipulations with this data.
1164

1165
A &quot;part&quot; in the table is part of the data from a single partition, sorted by the primary key.
1166

1167
You can use the system.parts table to view the set of table parts and partitions:
1168

1169
%%SELECT * FROM system.parts WHERE active%%
1170

1171
active - Only count active parts. Inactive parts are, for example, source parts remaining after merging to a larger part - these parts are deleted approximately 10 minutes after merging.
1172

1173
Another way to view a set of parts and partitions is to go into the directory with table data.
1174 1175
The directory with data is
/opt/clickhouse/data/<i>database</i>/<i>table</i>/,
1176
where /opt/clickhouse/ is the path to ClickHouse data, &#39;database&#39; is the database name, and &#39;table&#39; is the table name. Example:
1177

1178
%%
1179 1180 1181 1182 1183 1184
$ ls -l /opt/clickhouse/data/test/visits/
total 48
drwxrwxrwx 2 metrika metrika 20480 may   13 02:58 20140317_20140323_2_2_0
drwxrwxrwx 2 metrika metrika 20480 may   13 02:58 20140317_20140323_4_4_0
drwxrwxrwx 2 metrika metrika  4096 may   13 02:55 detached
-rw-rw-rw- 1 metrika metrika     2 may   13 02:58 increment.txt
1185
%%
1186

1187
Here 20140317_20140323_2_2_0 and 20140317_20140323_4_4_0 are directories of parts.
1188 1189 1190 1191 1192 1193 1194 1195 1196

Let&#39;s look at the name of the first part: 20140317_20140323_2_2_0.
20140317 - minimum date of part data
20140323 - maximum date of part data
2 - minimum number of the data block
2 - maximum number of the data block
0 - part level - depth of the merge tree that formed it

Each part corresponds to a single partition and contains data for a single month.
1197
201403 - The partition name. A partition is a set of parts for a single month.
1198

1199
On an operating server, you can&#39;t manually change the set of parts or their data on the file system, since the server won&#39;t know about it. For non-replicated tables, you can do this when the server is stopped, but we don&#39;t recommended it. For replicated tables, the set of parts can&#39;t be changed in any case.
1200

1201
The &#39;detached&#39; directory contains parts that are not used by the server - detached from the table using the ALTER ... DETACH query. Parts that are damaged are also moved to this directory, instead of deleting them. You can add, delete, or modify the data in the &#39;detached&#39; directory at any time - the server won&#39;t know about this until you make the ALTER TABLE ... ATTACH query.
1202

1203
For replicated tables, there is also an &#39;unreplicated&#39; directory. This directory can hold the portion of table data that does not participate in replication. This data is present only if the table was converted from a non-replicated one (see the section &quot;Conversion from MergeTree to ReplicatedMergeTree&quot;).
1204 1205


1206
%%ALTER TABLE [db.]table DETACH [UNREPLICATED] PARTITION &#39;name&#39;%%
1207

1208 1209
Move all data for partitions named &#39;name&#39; to the &#39;detached&#39; directory and forget about them.
The partition name is specified in YYYYMM format. It can be indicated in single quotes or without them.
1210

1211
After the query is executed, you can do whatever you want with the data in the &#39;detached&#39; directory — delete it from the file system, or just leave it.
1212

1213
If UNREPLICATED is specified (this only works for replicatable tables), the query is run for the unreplicated part of a replicatable table.
1214

1215
The query is replicated - data will be moved to the &#39;detached&#39; directory and forgotten on all replicas. The query can only be sent to a leader replica. To find out if a replica is a leader, perform SELECT to the &#39;system.replicas&#39; system table. Alternatively, it is easier to make a query on all replicas, and all except one will throw an exception.
1216 1217


1218
%%ALTER TABLE [db.]table DROP [UNREPLICATED] PARTITION &#39;name&#39;%%
1219

1220
Similar to the DETACH operation. Deletes data from the table. Data parts will be tagged as inactive and will be completely deleted in approximately 10 minutes. The query is replicated - data will be deleted on all replicas.
1221 1222


1223
%%ALTER TABLE [db.]table ATTACH [UNREPLICATED] PARTITION|PART &#39;name&#39;%%
1224

1225
Adds data to the table from the &#39;detached&#39; directory. Or, if UNREPLICATED is specified, data is moved from an &#39;unreplicated&#39; part to replicated data.
1226

1227
It is possible to add data for an entire partition or a separate part. For a part, specify the full name of the part in single quotes.
1228

1229
The query is replicated. Each replica checks whether there is data in the &#39;detached&#39; directory. If there is data, it checks the integrity, verifies that it matches the data on the server that initiated the query, and then adds it if everything is correct. If not, it downloads data from the query requestor replica, or from another replica where the data has already been added.
1230

1231
So you can put data in the &#39;detached&#39; directory on one replica, and use the ALTER ... ATTACH query to add it to the table on all replicas.
1232 1233


1234
%%ALTER TABLE [db.]table FREEZE PARTITION &#39;name&#39;%%
1235

1236
Creates a local backup of one or multiple partitions. The name can be the full name of the partition (for example, 201403), or its prefix (for example, 2014) - then the backup will be created for all the corresponding partitions.
1237

1238
The query does the following: for a data snapshot at the time of execution, it creates hardlinks to table data in the directory /opt/clickhouse/shadow/N/...
1239 1240 1241
/opt/clickhouse/ is the working ClickHouse directory from the config.
N is the incremental number of the backup.
The same structure of directories is created inside the backup as inside /opt/clickhouse/.
1242
It also performs &#39;chmod&#39; for all files, forbidding writes to them.
1243

1244
The backup is created almost instantly (but first it waits for current queries to the corresponding table to finish running). At first, the backup doesn&#39;t take any space on the disk. As the system works, the backup can take disk space, as data is modified. If the backup is made for old enough data, it won&#39;t take space on the disk.
1245

1246
After creating the backup, data from /opt/clickhouse/shadow/ can be copied to the remote server and then deleted on the local server. The entire backup process is performed without stopping the server.
1247

1248
The ALTER ... FREEZE PARTITION query is not replicated. A local backup is only created on the local server.
1249

1250
As an alternative, you can manually copy data from the /opt/clickhouse/data/database/table directory. But if you do this while the server is running, race conditions are possible when copying directories with files being added or changed, and the backup may be inconsistent. You can do this if the server isn&#39;t running - then the resulting data will be the same as after the ALTER TABLE t FREEZE PARTITION query.
1251

1252
ALTER TABLE ... FREEZE PARTITION only copies data, not table metadata. To make a backup of table metadata, copy the file  /opt/clickhouse/metadata/database/table.sql
1253

1254
To restore from a backup:
1255 1256
- Use the CREATE query to create the table if it doesn&#39;t exist. The query can be taken from an .sql file (replace ATTACH in it with CREATE).
- Copy data from the data/database/table/ directory inside the backup to the /opt/clickhouse/data/database/table/detached/ directory.
1257
- Run ALTER TABLE ... ATTACH PARTITION YYYYMM queries where YYYYMM is the month, for every month.
1258

1259 1260
In this way, data from the backup will be added to the table.
Restoring from a backup doesn&#39;t require stopping the server.
1261

1262
<b>Backups and replication</b>
1263

1264
Replication provides protection from device failures. If all data disappeared on one of your replicas, follow the instructions in the &quot;Restoration after failure&quot; section to restore it.
1265

1266
For protection from device failures, you must use replication. For more information about replication, see the section &quot;Data replication&quot;.
1267

1268
Backups protect against human error (accidentally deleting data, deleting the wrong data or in the wrong cluster, or corrupting data). For high-volume databases, it can be difficult to copy backups to remote servers. In such cases, to protect from human error, you can keep a backup on the same server (it will reside in /opt/clickhouse/shadow/).
1269 1270


1271
%%ALTER TABLE [db.]table FETCH PARTITION &#39;name&#39; FROM &#39;path-in-zookeeper&#39;%%
1272

1273
This query only works for replicatable tables.
1274

1275
It downloads the specified partition from the shard that has its ZooKeeper path specified in the FROM clause, then puts it in the &#39;detached&#39; directory for the specified table.
1276

1277
Although the query is called ALTER TABLE, it does not change the table structure, and does not immediately change the data available in the table.
1278

1279
Data is placed in the &#39;detached&#39; directory. You can use the ALTER TABLE ... ATTACH query to attach the data.
1280

1281 1282
The path to ZooKeeper is specified in the FROM clause. For example, %%/clickhouse/tables/01-01/visits%%.
Before downloading, the system checks that the partition exists and the table structure matches. The most appropriate replica is selected automatically from the healthy replicas.
1283

1284
The ALTER ... FETCH PARTITION query is not replicated. The partition will be downloaded to the &#39;detached&#39; directory only on the local server. Note that if after this you use the ALTER TABLE ... ATTACH query to add data to the table, the data will be added on all replicas (on one of the replicas it will be added from the &#39;detached&#39; directory, and on the rest it will be loaded from neighboring replicas).
1285 1286 1287 1288


<h4>Synchronicity of ALTER queries</h4>

1289
For non-replicatable tables, all ALTER queries are performed synchronously. For replicatable tables, the query just adds instructions for the appropriate actions to ZooKeeper, and the actions themselves are performed as soon as possible. However, the query can wait for these actions to be completed on all the replicas.
1290

1291 1292
For ALTER ... ATTACH|DETACH|DROP queries, you can use the &#39;replication_alter_partitions_sync&#39; setting to set up waiting.
Possible values: 0 - do not wait, 1 - wait for own completion (default), 2 - wait for all.
1293 1294 1295



1296
===SHOW DATABASES===
1297

1298
%%SHOW DATABASES [FORMAT format]%%
1299

1300
Prints a list of all databases.
1301
This query is identical to the query SELECT name FROM system.databases [FORMAT format]
1302
See the section &quot;Formats&quot;.
1303 1304


1305
===SHOW TABLES===
1306

1307
%%SHOW TABLES [FROM db] [LIKE &#39;pattern&#39;] [FORMAT format]%%
1308

1309
Outputs a list of
1310
- tables from the current database, or from the &#39;db&#39; database if &quot;FROM db&quot; is specified.
1311
- all tables, or tables whose name matches the pattern, if &quot;LIKE &#39;pattern&#39;&quot; is specified.
1312

1313
The query is identical to the query  SELECT name FROM system.tables
1314
WHERE database = &#39;db&#39; [AND name LIKE &#39;pattern&#39;] [FORMAT format]
1315
See the section &quot;LIKE operator&quot;.
1316 1317


1318
===SHOW PROCESSLIST===
1319

1320
%%SHOW PROCESSLIST [FORMAT format]%%
1321

1322
Outputs a list of queries currently being processed, other than SHOW PROCESSLIST queries.
1323

1324
Prints a table containing the columns:
1325

1326
<b>user</b> is the user who made the query. Keep in mind that for distributed processing, queries are sent to remote servers under the &#39;default&#39; user. SHOW PROCESSLIST shows the username for a specific query, not for a query that this query initiated.
1327

1328
<b>address</b> is the name of the host that the query was sent from. For distributed processing, on remote servers, this is the name of the query requestor host. To track where a distributed query was originally made from, look at SHOW PROCESSLIST on the query requestor server.
1329

1330
<b>elapsed</b> - The execution time, in seconds. Queries are output in order of decreasing execution time.
1331

1332
<b>rows_read</b>, <b>bytes_read</b> - How many rows and bytes of uncompressed data were read when processing the query. For distributed processing, data is totaled from all the remote servers. This is the data used for restrictions and quotas.
1333

1334
<b>memory_usage</b> - Current RAM usage in bytes. See the setting &#39;max_memory_usage&#39;.
1335

1336
<b>query</b> - The query itself. In INSERT queries, the data for insertion is not output.
1337

1338
<b>query_id</b> - The query identifier. Non-empty only if it was explicitly defined by the user. For distributed processing, the query ID is not passed to remote servers.
1339

1340
This query is exactly the same as: SELECT * FROM system.processes [FORMAT format].
1341

1342 1343
Tip (execute in the console):
%%watch -n1 &quot;clickhouse-client --query=&#39;SHOW PROCESSLIST&#39;&quot;%%
1344 1345


1346
===SHOW CREATE TABLE===
1347

1348
%%SHOW CREATE TABLE [db.]table [FORMAT format]%%
1349

1350
Returns a single String-type &#39;statement&#39; column, which contains a single value - the CREATE query used for creating the specified table.
1351 1352


1353
===DESCRIBE TABLE===
1354

1355
%%DESC|DESCRIBE TABLE [db.]table [FORMAT format]%%
1356

1357
Returns two String-type columns: &#39;name&#39; and &#39;type&#39;, which indicate the names and types of columns in the specified table.
1358

1359
Nested data structures are output in &quot;expanded&quot; format. Each column is shown separately, with the name after a dot.
1360 1361


1362
===EXISTS===
1363

1364
%%EXISTS TABLE [db.]name [FORMAT format]%%
1365

1366
Returns a single UInt8-type column, which contains the single value 0 if the table or database doesn&#39;t exist, or 1 if the table exists in the specified database.
1367 1368


1369
===USE===
1370

1371
%%USE db%%
1372

1373
Lets you set the current database for the session.
1374
The current database is used for searching for tables if the database is not explicitly defined in the query with a dot before the table name.
1375
This query can&#39;t be made when using the HTTP protocol, since there is no concept of a session.
1376 1377


1378
===SET===
1379

1380
%%SET [GLOBAL] param = value%%
1381

1382 1383
Lets you set the &#39;param&#39; setting to &#39;value&#39;. You can also make all the settings from the specified settings profile in a single query. To do this, specify &#39;profile&#39; as the setting name. For more information, see the section &quot;Settings&quot;. The setting is made for the session, or for the server (globally) if GLOBAL is specified.
When making a global setting, the setting is not applied to sessions already running, including the current session. It will only be used for new sessions.
1384

1385
Settings made using SET GLOBAL have a lower priority compared with settings made in the config file in the user profile. In other words, user settings can&#39;t be overridden by SET GLOBAL.
1386

1387 1388
When the server is restarted, global settings made using SET GLOBAL are lost.
To make settings that persist after a server restart, you can only use the server&#39;s config file. (This can&#39;t be done using a SET query.)
1389 1390


1391
===OPTIMIZE===
1392

1393
%%OPTIMIZE TABLE [db.]name%%
1394

1395 1396
Asks the table engine to do something for optimization.
Supported only by *MergeTree engines, in which this query initializes a non-scheduled merge of data parts.
1397

1398
For replicated tables, the OPTIMIZE query is only applied to non-replicated data (this data exists only after converting non-replicated tables to replicated ones). If there isn&#39;t any, the query doesn&#39;t do anything.
1399 1400


1401
===INSERT===
1402

1403
This query has several variations.
1404

1405
%%INSERT INTO [db.]table [(c1, c2, c3)] VALUES (v11, v12, v13), (v21, v22, v23), ...%%
1406

1407
Inserts rows with the listed values in the &#39;table&#39; table. This query is exactly the same as:
1408

1409
%%INSERT INTO [db.]table [(c1, c2, c3)] FORMAT Values (v11, v12, v13), (v21, v22, v23), ...%%
1410

1411
%%INSERT INTO [db.]table [(c1, c2, c3)] FORMAT format ...%%
1412

1413 1414
Inserts data in any specified format.
The data itself comes after &#39;format&#39;, after all space symbols up to the first line break if there is one and including it, or after all space symbols if there isn&#39;t a line break. We recommend writing data starting from the next line (this is important if the data starts with space characters).
1415

1416
Example:
1417

1418
%%INSERT INTO t FORMAT TabSeparated
1419 1420
11  Hello, world!
22  Qwerty
1421
%%
1422

1423
For more information about data formats, see the section &quot;Formats&quot;. The &quot;Interfaces&quot; section describes how to insert data separately from the query when using the command-line client or the HTTP interface.
1424

1425 1426
The query may optionally specify a list of columns for insertion. In this case, the default values are written to the other columns.
Default values are calculated from DEFAULT expressions specified in table definitions, or, if the DEFAULT is not explicitly defined, zeros and empty strings are used. If the &#39;strict_insert_default&#39; setting is set to 1, all the columns that do not have explicit DEFAULTS must be specified in the query.
1427

1428
%%INSERT INTO [db.]table [(c1, c2, c3)] SELECT ...%%
1429

1430
Inserts the result of the SELECT query into a table.
1431 1432
The names and data types of the SELECT result must exactly match the table structure that data is inserted into, or the specified list of columns.
To change column names, use synonyms (AS) in the SELECT query.
1433
To change data types, use type conversion functions (see the section &quot;Functions&quot;).
1434

1435 1436
None of the data formats allows using expressions as values.
In other words, you can&#39;t write INSERT INTO t VALUES (now(), 1 + 1, DEFAULT).
1437

1438
There is no support for other data part modification queries:
1439
UPDATE, DELETE, REPLACE, MERGE, UPSERT, INSERT UPDATE.
1440
However, you can delete old data using ALTER TABLE ... DROP PARTITION.
1441 1442


1443
===SELECT===
1444

1445
His Highness, the SELECT query.
1446

1447
%%SELECT [DISTINCT] expr_list
1448 1449 1450 1451 1452 1453 1454 1455 1456 1457 1458
    [FROM [db.]table | (subquery) | table_function] [FINAL]
    [SAMPLE sample_coeff]
    [ARRAY JOIN ...]
    [GLOBAL] ANY|ALL INNER|LEFT JOIN (subquery)|table USING columns_list
    [PREWHERE expr]
    [WHERE expr]
    [GROUP BY expr_list] [WITH TOTALS]
    [HAVING expr]
    [ORDER BY expr_list]
    [LIMIT [n, ]m]
    [UNION ALL ...]
1459
    [FORMAT format]%%
1460

1461 1462
All the clauses are optional, except for the required list of expressions immediately after SELECT.
The clauses below are described in almost the same order as in the query execution conveyor.
1463

1464 1465
If the query omits the DISTINCT, GROUP BY, and ORDER BY clauses and the IN and JOIN subqueries, the query will be completely stream processed, using O(1) amount of RAM.
Otherwise, the query may consume too much RAM, if appropriate restrictions are not defined (max_memory_usage, max_rows_to_group_by, max_rows_to_sort, max_rows_in_distinct, max_bytes_in_distinct, max_rows_in_set, max_bytes_in_set, max_rows_in_join, max_bytes_in_join, max_bytes_before_external_sort). For more information, see the section &quot;Settings&quot;. It is possible to use external sorting (saving temporary tables to a disk). The system does not have external aggregation or merge join.
1466 1467 1468

<h4>FROM clause</h4>

1469 1470
If the FROM clause is omitted, data will be read from the &#39;system.one&#39; table.
The &#39;system.one&#39; table contains exactly one row (this table fulfills the same purpose as the DUAL table found in other DBMSs).
1471

1472
The FROM clause specifies the table to read data from, or a subquery, or a table function; ARRAY JOIN and the regular JOIN may also be included (see below).
1473

1474 1475
Instead of a table, the SELECT subquery may be specified in brackets. In this case, the subquery processing pipeline will be built into the processing pipeline of an external query.
In contrast to standard SQL, a synonym does not need to be specified after a subquery. For compatibility, it is possible to write &#39;AS name&#39; after a subquery, but the specified name isn&#39;t used anywhere.
1476

1477
A table function may be specified instead of a table. For more information, see the section &quot;Table functions&quot;.
1478

1479 1480
To execute a query, all the columns listed in the query are extracted from the appropriate table. Any columns not needed for the external query are thrown out of the subqueries.
If a query does not list any columns (for example, SELECT count() FROM t), some column is extracted from the table anyway (the smallest one is preferred), in order to calculate the number of rows.
1481

1482
The FINAL modifier can be used only for a SELECT from a CollapsingMergeTree table. When you specify FINAL, data is selected fully &quot;collapsed&quot;. Keep in mind that using FINAL leads to a selection that includes columns related to the primary key, in addition to the columns specified in the SELECT. Additionally, the query will be executed in a single stream, and data will be merged during query execution. This means that when using FINAL, the query is processed more slowly. In most cases, you should avoid using FINAL. For more information, see the section &quot;CollapsingMergeTree engine&quot;.
1483 1484 1485

<h4>SAMPLE clause</h4>

1486
The SAMPLE clause allows for approximated query processing.
1487 1488
Approximated query processing is only supported by MergeTree* type tables, and only if the sampling expression was specified during table creation (see the section &quot;MergeTree engine&quot;).

1489
SAMPLE has the format %%SAMPLE k%%, where &#39;k&#39; is a decimal number from 0 to 1, or %%SAMPLE n%%, where &#39;n&#39; is a sufficiently large integer.
1490

1491 1492
In the first case, the query will be executed on &#39;k&#39; percent of data. For example, %%SAMPLE 0.1%% runs the query on 10% of data.
In the second case, the query will be executed on a sample of no more than &#39;n&#39; rows. For example, %%SAMPLE 10000000%% runs the query on a maximum of 10,000,000 rows.
1493

1494
Example:
1495

1496
%%SELECT
1497 1498 1499 1500 1501 1502 1503 1504 1505 1506 1507 1508
    Title,
    count() * 10 AS PageViews
FROM hits_distributed
SAMPLE 0.1
WHERE
    CounterID = 34
    AND toDate(EventDate) >= toDate(&#39;2013-01-29&#39;)
    AND toDate(EventDate) &lt;= toDate(&#39;2013-02-04&#39;)
    AND NOT DontCountHits
    AND NOT Refresh
    AND Title != &#39;&#39;
GROUP BY Title
1509
ORDER BY PageViews DESC LIMIT 1000%%
1510

1511
In this example, the query is executed on a sample from 0.1 (10%) of data. Values of aggregate functions are not corrected automatically, so to get an approximate result, the value &#39;count()&#39; is manually multiplied by 10.
1512

1513
When using something like %%SAMPLE 10000000%%, there isn&#39;t any information about which relative percent of data was processed or what the aggregate functions should be multiplied by, so this method of writing is not always appropriate to the situation.
1514

1515
A sample with a relative coefficient is &quot;consistent&quot;: if we look at all possible data that could be in the table, a sample (when using a single sampling expression specified during table creation) with the same coefficient always selects the same subset of possible data. In other words, a sample from different tables on different servers at different times is made the same way.
1516

1517
For example, a sample of user IDs takes rows with the same subset of all the possible user IDs from different tables. This allows using the sample in subqueries in the IN clause, as well as for manually correlating results of different queries with samples.
1518 1519 1520

<h4>ARRAY JOIN clause</h4>

1521
Allows executing JOIN with an array or nested data structure. The intent is similar to the &#39;arrayJoin&#39; function, but its functionality is broader.
1522

1523
ARRAY JOIN is essentially INNER JOIN with an array. Example:
1524

1525
%%
1526 1527 1528 1529 1530 1531 1532 1533 1534 1535 1536 1537 1538 1539 1540 1541 1542 1543 1544 1545 1546 1547 1548 1549 1550 1551 1552 1553 1554 1555 1556 1557 1558 1559 1560 1561 1562 1563 1564 1565 1566 1567 1568 1569 1570 1571 1572 1573
:) CREATE TABLE arrays_test (s String, arr Array(UInt8)) ENGINE = Memory

CREATE TABLE arrays_test
(
    s String,
    arr Array(UInt8)
) ENGINE = Memory

Ok.

0 rows in set. Elapsed: 0.001 sec.

:) INSERT INTO arrays_test VALUES (&#39;Hello&#39;, [1,2]), (&#39;World&#39;, [3,4,5]), (&#39;Goodbye&#39;, [])

INSERT INTO arrays_test VALUES

Ok.

3 rows in set. Elapsed: 0.001 sec.

:) SELECT * FROM arrays_test

SELECT *
FROM arrays_test

┌─s───────┬─arr─────┐
│ Hello   │ [1,2]   │
│ World   │ [3,4,5] │
│ Goodbye │ []      │
└─────────┴─────────┘

3 rows in set. Elapsed: 0.001 sec.

:) SELECT s, arr FROM arrays_test ARRAY JOIN arr

SELECT s, arr
FROM arrays_test
ARRAY JOIN arr

┌─s─────┬─arr─┐
│ Hello │   1 │
│ Hello │   2 │
│ World │   3 │
│ World │   4 │
│ World │   5 │
└───────┴─────┘

5 rows in set. Elapsed: 0.001 sec.
1574
%%
1575

1576
An alias can be specified for an array in the ARRAY JOIN clause. In this case, an array item can be accessed by this alias, but the array itself by the original name. Example:
1577

1578
%%
1579 1580 1581 1582 1583 1584 1585 1586 1587 1588 1589 1590 1591 1592 1593
:) SELECT s, arr, a FROM arrays_test ARRAY JOIN arr AS a

SELECT s, arr, a
FROM arrays_test
ARRAY JOIN arr AS a

┌─s─────┬─arr─────┬─a─┐
│ Hello │ [1,2]   │ 1 │
│ Hello │ [1,2]   │ 2 │
│ World │ [3,4,5] │ 3 │
│ World │ [3,4,5] │ 4 │
│ World │ [3,4,5] │ 5 │
└───────┴─────────┴───┘

5 rows in set. Elapsed: 0.001 sec.
1594
%%
1595

1596 1597
Multiple arrays of the same size can be comma-separated in the ARRAY JOIN clause. In this case, JOIN is performed with them simultaneously (the direct sum, not the direct product).
Example:
1598

1599
%%
1600 1601 1602 1603 1604 1605 1606 1607 1608 1609 1610 1611 1612 1613 1614 1615 1616 1617 1618 1619 1620 1621 1622 1623 1624 1625 1626 1627 1628 1629 1630
:) SELECT s, arr, a, num, mapped FROM arrays_test ARRAY JOIN arr AS a, arrayEnumerate(arr) AS num, arrayMap(x -> x + 1, arr) AS mapped

SELECT s, arr, a, num, mapped
FROM arrays_test
ARRAY JOIN arr AS a, arrayEnumerate(arr) AS num, arrayMap(lambda(tuple(x), plus(x, 1)), arr) AS mapped

┌─s─────┬─arr─────┬─a─┬─num─┬─mapped─┐
│ Hello │ [1,2]   │ 1 │   1 │      2 │
│ Hello │ [1,2]   │ 2 │   2 │      3 │
│ World │ [3,4,5] │ 3 │   1 │      4 │
│ World │ [3,4,5] │ 4 │   2 │      5 │
│ World │ [3,4,5] │ 5 │   3 │      6 │
└───────┴─────────┴───┴─────┴────────┘

5 rows in set. Elapsed: 0.002 sec.

:) SELECT s, arr, a, num, arrayEnumerate(arr) FROM arrays_test ARRAY JOIN arr AS a, arrayEnumerate(arr) AS num

SELECT s, arr, a, num, arrayEnumerate(arr)
FROM arrays_test
ARRAY JOIN arr AS a, arrayEnumerate(arr) AS num

┌─s─────┬─arr─────┬─a─┬─num─┬─arrayEnumerate(arr)─┐
│ Hello │ [1,2]   │ 1 │   1 │ [1,2]               │
│ Hello │ [1,2]   │ 2 │   2 │ [1,2]               │
│ World │ [3,4,5] │ 3 │   1 │ [1,2,3]             │
│ World │ [3,4,5] │ 4 │   2 │ [1,2,3]             │
│ World │ [3,4,5] │ 5 │   3 │ [1,2,3]             │
└───────┴─────────┴───┴─────┴─────────────────────┘

5 rows in set. Elapsed: 0.002 sec.
1631
%%
1632

1633
ARRAY JOIN also works with nested data structures. Example:
1634

1635
%%
1636 1637 1638 1639 1640 1641 1642 1643 1644 1645 1646 1647 1648 1649 1650 1651 1652 1653 1654 1655 1656 1657 1658 1659 1660 1661 1662 1663 1664 1665 1666 1667 1668 1669 1670 1671 1672 1673 1674 1675 1676 1677 1678 1679 1680 1681 1682 1683 1684 1685
:) CREATE TABLE nested_test (s String, nest Nested(x UInt8, y UInt32)) ENGINE = Memory

CREATE TABLE nested_test
(
    s String,
    nest Nested(
    x UInt8,
    y UInt32)
) ENGINE = Memory

Ok.

0 rows in set. Elapsed: 0.006 sec.

:) INSERT INTO nested_test VALUES (&#39;Hello&#39;, [1,2], [10,20]), (&#39;World&#39;, [3,4,5], [30,40,50]), (&#39;Goodbye&#39;, [], [])

INSERT INTO nested_test VALUES

Ok.

3 rows in set. Elapsed: 0.001 sec.

:) SELECT * FROM nested_test

SELECT *
FROM nested_test

┌─s───────┬─nest.x──┬─nest.y─────┐
│ Hello   │ [1,2]   │ [10,20]    │
│ World   │ [3,4,5] │ [30,40,50] │
│ Goodbye │ []      │ []         │
└─────────┴─────────┴────────────┘

3 rows in set. Elapsed: 0.001 sec.

:) SELECT s, nest.x, nest.y FROM nested_test ARRAY JOIN nest

SELECT s, `nest.x`, `nest.y`
FROM nested_test
ARRAY JOIN nest

┌─s─────┬─nest.x─┬─nest.y─┐
│ Hello │      1 │     10 │
│ Hello │      2 │     20 │
│ World │      3 │     30 │
│ World │      4 │     40 │
│ World │      5 │     50 │
└───────┴────────┴────────┘

5 rows in set. Elapsed: 0.001 sec.
1686
%%
1687

1688
When specifying names of nested data structures in ARRAY JOIN, the meaning is the same as ARRAY JOIN with all the array elements that it consists of. Example:
1689

1690
%%
1691 1692 1693 1694 1695 1696 1697 1698 1699 1700 1701 1702 1703 1704 1705
:) SELECT s, nest.x, nest.y FROM nested_test ARRAY JOIN nest.x, nest.y

SELECT s, `nest.x`, `nest.y`
FROM nested_test
ARRAY JOIN `nest.x`, `nest.y`

┌─s─────┬─nest.x─┬─nest.y─┐
│ Hello │      1 │     10 │
│ Hello │      2 │     20 │
│ World │      3 │     30 │
│ World │      4 │     40 │
│ World │      5 │     50 │
└───────┴────────┴────────┘

5 rows in set. Elapsed: 0.001 sec.
1706
%%
1707

1708
This variation also makes sense:
1709

1710
%%
1711 1712 1713 1714 1715 1716 1717 1718 1719 1720 1721 1722 1723 1724 1725
:) SELECT s, nest.x, nest.y FROM nested_test ARRAY JOIN nest.x

SELECT s, `nest.x`, `nest.y`
FROM nested_test
ARRAY JOIN `nest.x`

┌─s─────┬─nest.x─┬─nest.y─────┐
│ Hello │      1 │ [10,20]    │
│ Hello │      2 │ [10,20]    │
│ World │      3 │ [30,40,50] │
│ World │      4 │ [30,40,50] │
│ World │      5 │ [30,40,50] │
└───────┴────────┴────────────┘

5 rows in set. Elapsed: 0.001 sec.
1726
%%
1727

1728
An alias may be used for a nested data structure, in order to select either the JOIN result or the source array. Example:
1729

1730
%%
1731 1732 1733 1734 1735 1736 1737 1738 1739 1740 1741 1742 1743 1744 1745
:) SELECT s, n.x, n.y, nest.x, nest.y FROM nested_test ARRAY JOIN nest AS n

SELECT s, `n.x`, `n.y`, `nest.x`, `nest.y`
FROM nested_test
ARRAY JOIN nest AS n

┌─s─────┬─n.x─┬─n.y─┬─nest.x──┬─nest.y─────┐
│ Hello │   1 │  10 │ [1,2]   │ [10,20]    │
│ Hello │   2 │  20 │ [1,2]   │ [10,20]    │
│ World │   3 │  30 │ [3,4,5] │ [30,40,50] │
│ World │   4 │  40 │ [3,4,5] │ [30,40,50] │
│ World │   5 │  50 │ [3,4,5] │ [30,40,50] │
└───────┴─────┴─────┴─────────┴────────────┘

5 rows in set. Elapsed: 0.001 sec.
1746
%%
1747

1748
Example of using the arrayEnumerate function:
1749

1750
%%
1751 1752 1753 1754 1755 1756 1757 1758 1759 1760 1761 1762 1763 1764 1765
:) SELECT s, n.x, n.y, nest.x, nest.y, num FROM nested_test ARRAY JOIN nest AS n, arrayEnumerate(nest.x) AS num

SELECT s, `n.x`, `n.y`, `nest.x`, `nest.y`, num
FROM nested_test
ARRAY JOIN nest AS n, arrayEnumerate(`nest.x`) AS num

┌─s─────┬─n.x─┬─n.y─┬─nest.x──┬─nest.y─────┬─num─┐
│ Hello │   1 │  10 │ [1,2]   │ [10,20]    │   1 │
│ Hello │   2 │  20 │ [1,2]   │ [10,20]    │   2 │
│ World │   3 │  30 │ [3,4,5] │ [30,40,50] │   1 │
│ World │   4 │  40 │ [3,4,5] │ [30,40,50] │   2 │
│ World │   5 │  50 │ [3,4,5] │ [30,40,50] │   3 │
└───────┴─────┴─────┴─────────┴────────────┴─────┘

5 rows in set. Elapsed: 0.002 sec.
1766
%%
1767

1768
The query can only specify a single ARRAY JOIN clause.
1769

1770
The corresponding conversion can be performed before the WHERE/PREWHERE clause (if its result is needed in this clause), or after completing WHERE/PREWHERE (to reduce the volume of calculations).
1771 1772 1773

<h4>JOIN clause</h4>

1774
The normal JOIN, which is not related to ARRAY JOIN described above.
1775

1776
%%
1777
[GLOBAL] ANY|ALL INNER|LEFT [OUTER] JOIN (subquery)|table USING columns_list
1778
%%
1779

1780
Performs joins with data from the subquery. At the beginning of query execution, the subquery specified after JOIN is run, and its result is saved in memory. Then it is read from the &quot;left&quot; table specified in the FROM clause, and while it is being read, for each of the read rows from the &quot;left&quot; table, rows are selected from the subquery results table (the &quot;right&quot; table) that meet the condition for matching the values of the columns specified in USING.
1781

1782
The table name can be specified instead of a subquery. This is equivalent to the &#39;SELECT * FROM table&#39; subquery, except in a special case when the table has the Join engine - an array prepared for joining.
1783

1784
All columns that are not needed for the JOIN are deleted from the subquery.
1785

1786
There are several types of JOINs:
1787

1788
INNER or LEFT - the type:
1789
If INNER is specified, the result will contain only those rows that have a matching row in the right table.
1790
If LEFT is specified, any rows in the left table that don&#39;t have matching rows in the right table will be assigned the default value - zeros or empty rows. LEFT OUTER may be written instead of LEFT; the word OUTER does not affect anything.
1791

1792
ANY or ALL - strictness:
1793
If ANY is specified and there are multiple matching rows in the right table, only the first one will be joined.
1794
If ALL is specified and there are multiple matching rows in the right table, the data will be multiplied by the number of these rows.
1795

1796 1797
Using ALL corresponds to the normal JOIN semantic from standard SQL.
Using ANY is optimal. If the right table has only one matching row, the results of ANY and ALL are the same. You must specify either ANY or ALL (neither of them is selected by default).
1798

1799
GLOBAL - distribution:
1800

1801
When using a normal %%JOIN%%, the query is sent to remote servers. Subqueries are run on each of them in order to make the right table, and the join is performed with this table. In other words, the right table is formed on each server separately.
1802

1803
When using %%GLOBAL ... JOIN%%, first the requestor server runs a subquery to calculate the right table. This temporary table is passed to each remote server, and queries are run on them using the temporary data that was transmitted.
1804

1805
Be careful when using GLOBAL JOINs. For more information, see the section &quot;Distributed subqueries&quot; below.
1806

1807
Any combination of JOINs is possible. For example, %%GLOBAL ANY LEFT OUTER JOIN%%.
1808

1809
When running JOINs, there is no optimization of the order of execution in relation to other stages of the query. The join (a search in the right table) is run before filtering in WHERE and before aggregation. In order to explicitly set the order of execution, we recommend running a JOIN subquery with a subquery.
1810

1811 1812
Example:
%%
1813 1814 1815 1816 1817 1818 1819 1820 1821 1822 1823 1824 1825 1826 1827 1828 1829 1830 1831 1832 1833 1834 1835 1836 1837 1838 1839 1840 1841 1842 1843 1844 1845 1846
SELECT
    CounterID,
    hits,
    visits
FROM
(
    SELECT
        CounterID,
        count() AS hits
    FROM test.hits
    GROUP BY CounterID
) ANY LEFT JOIN
(
    SELECT
        CounterID,
        sum(Sign) AS visits
    FROM test.visits
    GROUP BY CounterID
) USING CounterID
ORDER BY hits DESC
LIMIT 10

┌─CounterID─┬───hits─┬─visits─┐
│   1143050 │ 523264 │  13665 │
│    731962 │ 475698 │ 102716 │
│    722545 │ 337212 │ 108187 │
│    722889 │ 252197 │  10547 │
│   2237260 │ 196036 │   9522 │
│  23057320 │ 147211 │   7689 │
│    722818 │  90109 │  17847 │
│     48221 │  85379 │   4652 │
│  19762435 │  77807 │   7026 │
│    722884 │  77492 │  11056 │
└───────────┴────────┴────────┘
1847
%%
1848

1849 1850
Subqueries don&#39;t allow you to set names or use them for referencing a column from a specific subquery.
The columns specified in USING must have the same names in both subqueries, and the other columns must be named differently. You can use aliases to change the names of columns in subqueries (the example uses the aliases &#39;hits&#39; and &#39;visits&#39;).
1851

1852
The USING clause specifies one or more columns to join, which establishes the equality of these columns. The list of columns is set without brackets. More complex join conditions are not supported.
1853

1854
The right table (the subquery result) resides in RAM. If there isn&#39;t enough memory, you can&#39;t run a JOIN.
1855

1856
Only one JOIN can be specified in a query (on a single level). To run multiple JOINs, you can put them in subqueries.
1857

1858
Each time a query is run with the same JOIN, the subquery is run again - the result is not cached. To avoid this, use the special &#39;Join&#39; table engine, which is a prepared array for joining that is always in RAM. For more information, see the section &quot;Table engines, Join&quot;.
1859

1860
In some cases, it is more efficient to use IN instead of JOIN. Among the various types of JOINs, the most efficient is ANY LEFT JOIN, then ANY INNER JOIN. The least efficient are ALL LEFT JOIN and ALL INNER JOIN.
1861

1862
If you need a JOIN for joining with dimension tables (these are relatively small tables that contain dimension properties, such as names for advertising campaigns), a JOIN might not be very convenient due to the bulky syntax and the fact that the right table is re-accessed for every query. For such cases, there is an &quot;external dictionaries&quot; feature that you should use instead of JOIN. For more information, see the section &quot;External dictionaries&quot;.
1863 1864 1865 1866


<h4>WHERE clause</h4>

1867 1868
If there is a WHERE clause, it must contain an expression with the UInt8 type. This is usually an expression with comparison and logical operators.
This expression will be used for filtering data before all other transformations.
1869

1870
If indexes are supported by the database table engine, the expression is evaluated on the ability to use indexes.
1871 1872 1873

<h4>PREWHERE clause</h4>

1874
This clause has the same meaning as the WHERE clause. The difference is in which data is read from the table. When using PREWHERE, first only the columns necessary for executing PREWHERE are read. Then the other columns are read that are needed for running the query, but only those blocks where the PREWHERE expression is true.
1875

1876
It makes sense to use PREWHERE if there are filtration conditions that are not suitable for indexes that are used by a minority of the columns in the query, but that provide strong data filtration. This reduces the volume of data to read.
1877

1878
For example, it is useful to write PREWHERE for queries that extract a large number of columns, but that only have filtration for a few columns.
1879

1880
PREWHERE is only supported by *MergeTree tables.
1881

1882
A query may simultaneously specify PREWHERE and WHERE. In this case, PREWHERE precedes WHERE.
1883

1884
Keep in mind that it does not make much sense for PREWHERE to only specify those columns that have an index, because when using an index, only the data blocks that match the index are read.
1885

1886
If the &#39;optimize_move_to_prewhere&#39; setting is set to 1 and PREWHERE is omitted, the system uses heuristics to automatically move parts of expressions from WHERE to PREWHERE.
1887 1888 1889 1890


<h4>GROUP BY clause</h4>

1891
This is one of the most important parts of a column-oriented DBMS.
1892

1893 1894
If there is a GROUP BY clause, it must contain a list of expressions. Each expression will be referred to here as a &quot;key&quot;.
All the expressions in the SELECT, HAVING, and ORDER BY clauses must be calculated from keys or from aggregate functions. In other words, each column selected from the table must be used either in keys or inside aggregate functions.
1895

1896
If a query contains only table columns inside aggregate functions, the GROUP BY clause can be omitted, and aggregation by an empty set of keys is assumed.
1897

1898
Example:
1899

1900
%%SELECT
1901 1902 1903
    count(),
    median(FetchTiming > 60 ? 60 : FetchTiming),
    count() - sum(Refresh)
1904
FROM hits%%
1905

1906
However, in contrast to standard SQL, if the table doesn&#39;t have any rows (either there aren&#39;t any at all, or there aren&#39;t any after using WHERE to filter), an empty result is returned, and not the result from one of the rows containing the initial values of aggregate functions.
1907

1908
As opposed to MySQL (and conforming to standard SQL), you can&#39;t get some value of some column that is not in a key or aggregate function (except constant expressions). To work around this, you can use the &#39;any&#39; aggregate function (get the first encountered value) or &#39;min/max&#39;.
1909

1910
Example:
1911

1912
%%SELECT
1913 1914 1915 1916
    domainWithoutWWW(URL) AS domain,
    count(),
    any(Title) AS title -- we take the first page title for each domain
FROM hits
1917
GROUP BY domain%%
1918

1919
For every different key value encountered, GROUP BY calculates a set of aggregate function values.
1920

1921
GROUP BY is not supported for array columns.
1922

1923
A constant can&#39;t be specified as arguments for aggregate functions. Example: sum(1). Instead of this, you can get rid of the constant. Example: count().
1924 1925 1926 1927


<h5>WITH TOTALS modifier</h5>

1928
If the WITH TOTALS modifier is specified, another row will be calculated. This row will have key columns containing default values (zeros or empty lines), and columns of aggregate functions with the values calculated across all the rows (the &quot;total&quot; values).
1929

1930
This extra row is output in JSON*, TabSeparated*, and Pretty* formats, separately from the other rows. In the other formats, this row is not output.
1931

1932
In JSON* formats, this row is output as a separate &#39;totals&#39; field. In TabSeparated formats, the row comes after the main result, preceded by an empty row (after the other data). In Pretty formats, the row is output as a separate table after the main result.
1933

1934 1935
WITH TOTALS can be run in different ways when HAVING is present. The behavior depends on the &#39;totals_mode&#39; setting.
By default, totals_mode = &#39;<b>before_having</b>&#39;. In this case, &#39;totals&#39; is calculated across all rows, including the ones that don&#39;t pass through HAVING and &#39;max_rows_to_group_by&#39;.
1936

1937
The other alternatives include only the rows that pass through HAVING in &#39;totals&#39;, and behave differently with the setting &#39;max_rows_to_group_by&#39; and &#39;group_by_overflow_mode = &#39;any&#39;&#39;.
1938

1939
<b>after_having_exclusive</b> - Don&#39;t include rows that didn&#39;t pass through &#39;max_rows_to_group_by&#39;. In other words, &#39;totals&#39; will have less than or the same number of rows as it would if &#39;max_rows_to_group_by&#39; were omitted.
1940

1941
<b>after_having_inclusive</b> - Include all the rows that didn&#39;t pass through &#39;max_rows_to_group_by&#39; in &#39;totals&#39;. In other words, &#39;totals&#39; will have more than or the same number of rows as it would if &#39;max_rows_to_group_by&#39; were omitted.
1942

1943
<b>after_having_auto</b> - Count the number of rows that passed through HAVING. If it is more than a certain amount (by default, 50%), include all the rows that didn&#39;t pass through &#39;max_rows_to_group_by&#39; in &#39;totals&#39;. Otherwise, do not include them.
1944

1945
<b>totals_auto_threshold</b> - By default, 0.5 is the coefficient for <b>after_having_auto</b>.
1946

1947
If &#39;max_rows_to_group_by&#39; and &#39;group_by_overflow_mode = &#39;any&#39;&#39; are not used, all variations of &#39;after_having&#39; are the same, and you can use any of them (for example, &#39;after_having_auto&#39;).
1948

1949
You can use WITH TOTALS in subqueries, including subqueries in the JOIN clause. In this case, the respective total values are combined.
1950 1951 1952 1953


<h4>HAVING clause</h4>

1954 1955
Allows filtering the result received after GROUP BY, similar to the WHERE clause.
WHERE and HAVING differ in that WHERE is performed before aggregation (GROUP BY), while HAVING is performed after it. If aggregation is not performed, HAVING can&#39;t be used.
1956 1957 1958 1959


<h4>ORDER BY clause</h4>

1960
The ORDER BY clause contains a list of expressions, which can each be assigned DESC or ASC (the sorting direction). If the direction is not specified, ASC is assumed. ASC is sorted in ascending order, and DESC in descending order. The sorting direction applies to a single expression, not to the entire list. Example: %%ORDER BY Visits DESC, SearchPhrase%%
1961

1962
For sorting by String values, you can specify collation (comparison). Example: %%ORDER BY SearchPhrase COLLATE &#39;tr&#39;%% - for sorting by keyword in ascending order, using the Turkish alphabet, case insensitive, assuming that strings are UTF-8 encoded. COLLATE can be specified or not for each expression in ORDER BY independently. If ASC or DESC is specified, COLLATE is specified after it. When using COLLATE, sorting is always case-insensitive.
1963

1964
We only recommend using COLLATE for final sorting of a small number of rows, since sorting with COLLATE is less efficient than normal sorting by bytes.
1965

1966 1967
Rows that have identical values for the list of sorting expressions are output in an arbitrary order, which can also be nondeterministic (different each time).
If the ORDER BY clause is omitted, the order of the rows is also undefined, and may be nondeterministic as well.
1968

1969
When floating point numbers are sorted, NaNs are separate from the other values. Regardless of the sorting order, NaNs come at the end. In other words, for ascending sorting they are placed as if they are larger than all the other numbers, while for descending sorting they are placed as if they are smaller than the rest.
1970

1971
Less RAM is used if a small enough LIMIT is specified in addition to ORDER BY. Otherwise, the amount of memory spent is proportional to the volume of data for sorting. For distributed query processing, if GROUP BY is omitted, sorting is partially done on remote servers, and the results are merged on the requestor server. This means that for distributed sorting, the volume of data to sort can be greater than the amount of memory on a single server.
1972

1973
If there is not enough RAM, it is possible to perform sorting in external memory (creating temporary files on a disk). Use the setting %%max_bytes_before_external_sort%% for this purpose. If it is set to 0 (the default), external sorting is disabled. If it is enabled, when the volume of data to sort reaches the specified number of bytes, the collected data is sorted and dumped into a temporary file. After all data is read, all the sorted files are merged and the results are output. Files are written to the /opt/clickhouse/tmp/ directory in the config (by default, but you can use the &#39;tmp_path&#39; parameter to change this setting).
1974

1975
Running a query may use more memory than &#39;max_bytes_before_external_sort&#39;. For this reason, this setting must have a value significantly smaller than &#39;max_memory_usage&#39;. As an example, if your server has 128 GB of RAM and you need to run a single query, set &#39;max_memory_usage&#39; to 100 GB, and &#39;max_bytes_before_external_sort&#39; to 80 GB.
1976

1977
External sorting works much less effectively than sorting in RAM.
1978 1979 1980

<h4>SELECT clause</h4>

1981 1982
The expressions specified in the SELECT clause are analyzed after the calculations for all the clauses listed above are completed.
More specifically, expressions are analyzed that are above the aggregate functions, if there are any aggregate functions. The aggregate functions and everything below them are calculated during aggregation (GROUP BY). These expressions work as if they are applied to separate rows in the result.
1983 1984 1985

<h4>DISTINCT clause</h4>

1986
If DISTINCT is specified, only a single row will remain out of all the sets of fully matching rows in the result.
1987 1988 1989
The result will be the same as if GROUP BY were specified across all the fields specified in SELECT without aggregate functions. But there are several differences from GROUP BY:
- DISTINCT can be applied together with GROUP BY.
- When ORDER BY is omitted and LIMIT is defined, the query stops running immediately after the required number of different rows has been read. In this case, using DISTINCT is much more optimal.
1990
- Data blocks are output as they are processed, without waiting for the entire query to finish running.
1991

1992
DISTINCT is not supported if SELECT has at least one array column.
1993 1994 1995

<h4>LIMIT clause</h4>

1996 1997
LIMIT m allows you to select the first &#39;m&#39; rows from the result.
LIMIT n, m allows you to select the first &#39;m&#39; rows from the result after skipping the first &#39;n&#39; rows.
1998

1999
&#39;n&#39; and &#39;m&#39; must be non-negative integers.
2000

2001
If there isn&#39;t an ORDER BY clause that explicitly sorts results, the result may be arbitrary and nondeterministic.
2002 2003 2004 2005


<h4>UNION ALL clause</h4>

2006
You can use UNION ALL to combine any number of queries. Example:
2007

2008
%%
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018
SELECT CounterID, 1 AS table, toInt64(count()) AS c
    FROM test.hits
    GROUP BY CounterID

UNION ALL

SELECT CounterID, 2 AS table, sum(Sign) AS c
    FROM test.visits
    GROUP BY CounterID
    HAVING c > 0
2019
%%
2020

2021
Only UNION ALL is supported. The regular UNION (UNION DISTINCT) is not supported. If you need UNION DISTINCT, you can write SELECT DISTINCT from a subquery containing UNION ALL.
2022

2023
Queries that are parts of UNION ALL can be run simultaneously, and their results can be mixed together.
2024

2025
The structure of results (the number and type of columns) must match for the queries, but the column names can differ. In this case, the column names for the final result will be taken from the first query.
2026

2027
Queries that are parts of UNION ALL can&#39;t be enclosed in brackets. ORDER BY and LIMIT are applied to separate queries, not to the final result. If you need to apply a conversion to the final result, you can put all the queries with UNION ALL in a subquery in the FROM clause.
2028 2029 2030 2031


<h4>FORMAT clause</h4>

2032
Specify &#39;FORMAT format&#39; to get data in any specified format.
2033
You can use this for convenience, or for creating dumps. For more information, see the section &quot;Formats&quot;.
2034
If the FORMAT clause is omitted, the default format is used, which depends on both the settings and the interface used for accessing the DB. For the HTTP interface and the command-line client in batch mode, the default format is TabSeparated. For the command-line client in interactive mode, the default format is PrettyCompact (it has attractive and compact tables).
2035

2036
When using the command-line client, data is passed to the client in an internal efficient format. The client independently interprets the FORMAT clause of the query and formats the data itself (thus relieving the network and the server from the load).
2037 2038 2039 2040


<h4>IN operators</h4>

2041
The %%IN%%, %%NOT IN%%, %%GLOBAL IN%%, and %%GLOBAL NOT IN%% operators are covered separately, since their functionality is quite rich.
2042

2043
The left side of the operator is either a single column or a tuple.
2044

2045
Examples:
2046

2047 2048
%%SELECT UserID IN (123, 456) FROM ...%%
%%SELECT (CounterID, UserID) IN ((34, 123), (101500, 456)) FROM ...%%
2049

2050
If the left side is a single column that is in the index, and the right side is a set of constants, the system uses the index for processing the query.
2051

2052
Don&#39;t list too many values explicitly (i.e. millions). If a data set is large, put it in a temporary table (for example, see the section &quot;External data for query processing&quot;), then use a subquery.
2053

2054
The right side of the operator can be a set of constant expressions, a set of tuples with constant expressions (shown in the examples above), or the name of a database table or SELECT subquery in brackets.
2055

2056
If the right side of the operator is the name of a table (for example, %%UserID IN users%%), this is equivalent to the subquery %%UserID IN (SELECT * FROM users)%%. Use this when working with external data that is sent along with the query. For example, the query can be sent together with a set of user IDs loaded to the &#39;users&#39; temporary table, which should be filtered.
2057

2058
If the right side of the operator is a table name that has the Set engine (a prepared data set that is always in RAM), the data set will not be created over again for each query.
2059

2060 2061 2062
The subquery may specify more than one column for filtering tuples.
Example:
%%SELECT (CounterID, UserID) IN (SELECT CounterID, UserID FROM ...) FROM ...%%
2063

2064
The columns to the left and right of the %%IN%% operator should have the same type.
2065

2066 2067
Exception: If there is an array to the left of IN, it checks that at least one array item belongs to the data set.
For example, %%[1, 2, 3] IN (3, 4, 5)%% returns 1. This is somewhat illogical, but it is convenient for implementing certain Yandex.Metrica functionality.
2068

2069 2070
If there is an array to the left of NOT IN, it checks that at least one array item does not belong to the data set.
For example, %%[1, 2, 3] NOT IN (3, 4, 5)%% returns 1. This is completely illogical, so don&#39;t rely on this behavior. We recommend using higher-order functions instead. Example: <span class="inline-example">arrayAll(x -> x IN (3, 4, 5), [1, 2, 3])</span> returns 0 - it checks whether all the array items belong to the data set.
2071

2072 2073
The IN operator and subquery may occur in any part of the query, including in aggregate functions and lambda functions.
Example:
2074

2075
%%SELECT
2076 2077 2078 2079 2080 2081 2082 2083 2084 2085 2086 2087 2088 2089 2090 2091 2092 2093 2094 2095
    EventDate,
    avg(UserID IN
    (
        SELECT UserID
        FROM test.hits
        WHERE EventDate = toDate(&#39;2014-03-17&#39;)
    )) AS ratio
FROM test.hits
GROUP BY EventDate
ORDER BY EventDate ASC

┌──EventDate─┬────ratio─┐
│ 2014-03-17 │        1 │
│ 2014-03-18 │ 0.807696 │
│ 2014-03-19 │ 0.755406 │
│ 2014-03-20 │ 0.723218 │
│ 2014-03-21 │ 0.697021 │
│ 2014-03-22 │ 0.647851 │
│ 2014-03-23 │ 0.648416 │
└────────────┴──────────┘
2096 2097
%%
- for each day after March 17th, count the percentage of pageviews made by users who visited the site on March 17th.
2098

2099
A subquery in the IN clause is always run just one time on a single server. There are no dependent subqueries.
2100 2101 2102 2103


<h4>Distributed subqueries</h4>

2104
There are two versions of INs with subqueries (and for JOINs): the regular %%IN%% / %%JOIN%%, and %%GLOBAL IN%% / %%GLOBAL JOIN%%. They differ in how they are run for distributed query processing.
2105

2106
When using the regular %%IN%%, the query is sent to remote servers, and each of them runs the subqueries in the IN or JOIN clause.
2107

2108
When using %%GLOBAL IN%% / %%GLOBAL JOIN%%, first all the subqueries for %%GLOBAL IN%% / %%GLOBAL JOIN%% are run, and the results are collected in temporary tables. Then the temporary tables are sent to each remote server, where the queries are run using this temporary data.
2109

2110
For a non-distributed query, use the regular %%IN%% / %%JOIN%%.
2111 2112


2113
Be careful when using subqueries in the  %%IN%% / %%JOIN%% clauses for distributed query processing.
2114

2115
Let&#39;s look at some examples. Assume that each server in the cluster has a normal <b>local_table</b>. Each server also has a <b>distributed_table</b> table with the <b>Distributed</b> type, which looks at all the servers in the cluster.
2116

2117
For a query to the <b>distributed_table</b>, the query will be sent to all the remote servers and run on them using the <b>local_table</b>.
2118

2119 2120
For example, the query
%%SELECT uniq(UserID) FROM distributed_table%%
2121
will be sent to all the remote servers as
2122 2123
%%SELECT uniq(UserID) FROM local_table%%
and run on each of them in parallel, until it reaches the stage where intermediate results can be combined. Then the intermediate results will be returned to the requestor server and merged on it, and the final result will be sent to the client.
2124

2125 2126 2127
Now let&#39;s examine a query with IN:
%%SELECT uniq(UserID) FROM distributed_table WHERE CounterID = 101500 AND UserID IN (SELECT UserID FROM local_table WHERE CounterID = 34)%%
- calculates the overlap in the audiences of two websites.
2128

2129 2130 2131
This query will be sent to all the remote servers as
%%SELECT uniq(UserID) FROM local_table WHERE CounterID = 101500 AND UserID IN (SELECT UserID FROM local_table WHERE CounterID = 34)%%
In other words, the data set in the %%IN%% clause will be collected on each server independently, only across the data that is stored locally on each of the servers.
2132

2133
This will work correctly and optimally if you are prepared for this case and have spread data across the cluster servers such that the data for a single UserID resides entirely on a single server. In this case, all the necessary data will be available locally on each server. Otherwise, the result will be inaccurate. We refer to this variation of the query as &quot;local IN&quot;.
2134

2135 2136
To correct how the query works when data is spread randomly across the cluster servers, you could specify <b>distributed_table</b> inside a subquery. The query would look like this:
%%SELECT uniq(UserID) FROM distributed_table WHERE CounterID = 101500 AND UserID IN (SELECT UserID FROM distributed_table WHERE CounterID = 34)%%
2137

2138 2139
This query will be sent to all remote servers as
%%SELECT uniq(UserID) FROM local_table WHERE CounterID = 101500 AND UserID IN (SELECT UserID FROM distributed_table WHERE CounterID = 34)%%
2140
Each of the remote servers will start running the subquery. Since the subquery uses a distributed table, each remote server will re-send the subquery to every remote server, as
2141 2142
%%SELECT UserID FROM local_table WHERE CounterID = 34%%
For example, if you have a cluster of 100 servers, executing the entire query will require 10,000 elementary requests, which is generally considered unacceptable.
2143

2144 2145
In such cases, you should always use %%GLOBAL IN%% instead of %%IN%%. Let&#39;s look at how it works for the query
%%SELECT uniq(UserID) FROM distributed_table WHERE CounterID = 101500 AND UserID GLOBAL IN (SELECT UserID FROM distributed_table WHERE CounterID = 34)%%
2146

2147 2148
The requestor server will execute the subquery
%%SELECT UserID FROM distributed_table WHERE CounterID = 34%%
2149
and the result will be put in a temporary table in RAM. Then a query will be sent to each remote server as
2150 2151
%%SELECT uniq(UserID) FROM local_table WHERE CounterID = 101500 AND UserID GLOBAL IN _data1%%
and the temporary table &#39;_data1&#39; will be sent to every remote server together with the query (the name of the temporary table is implementation-defined).
2152

2153
This is more optimal than using the normal IN. However, keep the following points in mind:
2154

2155 2156
1. When creating a temporary table, data is not made unique. To reduce the volume of data transmitted over the network, specify %%DISTINCT%% in the subquery. (You don&#39;t need to do this for a normal IN.)
2. The temporary table will be sent to all the remote servers. Transmission does not account for network topology. For example, if 10 remote servers reside in a datacenter that is very remote in relation to the requestor server, the data will be sent 10 times over the channel to the remote datacenter. Try to avoid large data sets when using %%GLOBAL IN%%.
2157
3. When transmitting data to remote servers, restrictions on network bandwidth are not configurable. You might overload the network.
2158 2159
4. Try to distribute data across servers so that you don&#39;t need to use %%GLOBAL IN%% on a regular basis.
5. If you need to use %%GLOBAL IN%% often, plan the location of the ClickHouse cluster so that a single group of replicas resides in no more than one data center, and there is a fast network between them.
2160

2161
It also makes sense to specify a local table in the %%GLOBAL IN%% clause, in case this local table is only available on the requestor server and you want to use data from it on remote servers.
2162 2163 2164 2165


<h4>Extreme values</h4>

2166
In addition to results, you can also get minimum and maximum values for the results columns. To do this, set the &#39;extremes&#39; setting to &#39;1&#39;. Minimums and maximums are calculated for numeric types, dates, and dates with times. For other columns, the default values are output.
2167

2168
An extra two rows are calculated - the minimums and maximums, respectively. These extra two rows are output in JSON*, TabSeparated*, and Pretty* formats, separate from the other rows. They are not output for other formats.
2169

2170
In JSON* formats, the extreme values are output in a separate &#39;extremes&#39; field. In TabSeparated formats, the row comes after the main result, and after &#39;totals&#39; if present. It is preceded by an empty row (after the other data). In Pretty formats, the row is output as a separate table after the main result, and after &#39;totals&#39; if present.
2171

2172
Extreme values are calculated for rows that have passed through LIMIT. However, when using &#39;LIMIT offset, size&#39;, the rows before &#39;offset&#39; are included in &#39;extremes&#39;. In stream requests, the result may also include a small number of rows that passed through LIMIT.
2173 2174 2175 2176


<h4>Notes</h4>

2177 2178
The GROUP BY and ORDER BY clauses do not support positional arguments. This contradicts MySQL, but conforms to standard SQL.
For example, &#39;GROUP BY 1, 2&#39; will be interpreted as grouping by constants (i.e. aggregation of all rows into one).
2179

2180
You can use synonyms (AS aliases) in any part of a query.
2181

2182
You can put an asterisk in any part of a query instead of an expression. When the query is analyzed, the asterisk is expanded to a list of all table columns (excluding the MATERIALIZED and ALIAS columns). There are only a few cases when using an asterisk is justified:
2183 2184 2185 2186 2187
- When creating a table dump.
- For tables containing just a few columns, such as system tables.
- For getting information about what columns are in a table. In this case, set &#39;LIMIT 1&#39;. But it is better to use the <b>DESC TABLE</b> query.
- When there is strong filtration on a small number of columns using PREWHERE.
- In subqueries (since columns that aren&#39;t needed for the external query are excluded from subqueries).
2188
In all other cases, we don&#39;t recommend using the asterisk, since it only gives you the drawbacks of a columnar DBMS instead of the advantages.
2189 2190 2191


</div>
2192
<div class="island">
2193 2194
<h1>External data for query processing</h1>
</div>
2195
<div class="island content">
2196

2197
ClickHouse allows sending a server the data that is needed for processing a query, together with a SELECT query. This data is put in a temporary table (see the section &quot;Temporary tables&quot;) and can be used in the query (for example, in IN operators).
2198

2199
For example, if you have a text file with important user identifiers, you can upload it to the server along with a query that uses filtration by this list.
2200

2201
If you need to run more than one query with a large volume of external data, don&#39;t use this feature. It is better to upload the data to the DB ahead of time.
2202

2203
External data can be uploaded using the command-line client (in non-interactive mode), or using the HTTP interface.
2204

2205
In the command-line client, you can specify a parameters section in the format
2206

2207
%%--external --file=... [--name=...] [--format=...] [--types=...|--structure=...]%%
2208

2209
You may have multiple sections like this, for the number of tables being transmitted.
2210 2211

<b>--external</b> - Marks the beginning of the section.
2212 2213
<b>--file</b> - Path to the file with the table dump, or %%-%%, which refers to stdin.
Only a single table can be retrieved from stdin.
2214

2215 2216 2217
The following parameters are optional:
<b>--name</b> - Name of the table. If omitted, %%_data%% is used.
<b>--format</b> - Data format in the file. If omitted, %%TabSeparated%% is used.
2218

2219 2220 2221
One of the following parameters is required:
<b>--types</b> - A comma-separated list of column types. For example, %%UInt64,String%%. Columns will be named %%_1%%, %%_2%%, ...
<b>--structure</b> - Table structure, in the format %%UserID UInt64, URL String%%. Defines the column names and types.
2222

2223
The files specified in %%file%% will be parsed by the format specified in %%format%%, using the data types specified in %%types%% or %%structure%%. The table will be uploaded to the server and accessible there as a temporary table with the name %%name%%.
2224

2225
Examples:
2226

2227
%%echo -ne &quot;1\n2\n3\n&quot; | clickhouse-client --query=&quot;SELECT count() FROM test.visits WHERE TraficSourceID IN _data&quot; --external --file=- --types=Int8
2228
849897
2229
%%
2230

2231
%%cat /etc/passwd | sed &#39;s/:/\t/g&#39; | clickhouse-client --query=&quot;SELECT shell, count() AS c FROM passwd GROUP BY shell ORDER BY c DESC&quot; --external --file=- --name=passwd --structure=&#39;login String, unused String, uid UInt16, gid UInt16, comment String, home String, shell String&#39;
2232 2233 2234 2235 2236
/bin/sh 20
/bin/false      5
/bin/bash       4
/usr/sbin/nologin       1
/bin/sync       1
2237
%%
2238

2239
When using the HTTP interface, external data is passed in the multipart/form-data format. Each table is transmitted as a separate file. The table name is taken from the file name. The &#39;query_string&#39; passes the parameters &#39;<i>name</i>_format&#39;, &#39;<i>name</i>_types&#39;, and &#39;<i>name</i>_structure&#39;, where <i>name</i> is the name of the table that these parameters correspond to. The meaning of the parameters is the same as when using the command-line client.
2240

2241
Example:
2242

2243
<pre class="text-example" style="overflow: scroll;">cat /etc/passwd | sed &#39;s/:/\t/g&#39; > passwd.tsv
2244 2245 2246 2247 2248 2249 2250 2251 2252

curl -F &#39;passwd=@passwd.tsv;&#39; &#39;http://localhost:8123/?query=SELECT+shell,+count()+AS+c+FROM+passwd+GROUP+BY+shell+ORDER+BY+c+DESC&amp;passwd_structure=login+String,+unused+String,+uid+UInt16,+gid+UInt16,+comment+String,+home+String,+shell+String&#39;
/bin/sh 20
/bin/false      5
/bin/bash       4
/usr/sbin/nologin       1
/bin/sync       1
</pre>

2253
For distributed query processing, the temporary tables are sent to all the remote servers.
2254 2255

</div>
2256
<div class="island">
2257 2258
<h1>Table engines</h1>
</div>
2259
<div class="island content">
2260

2261
The table engine (type of table) determines:
2262 2263 2264 2265 2266 2267
- How and where data is stored - where to write it to, and where to read it from.
- Which queries are supported, and how.
- Concurrent data access.
- Use of indexes, if present.
- Whether multithreaded request execution is possible.
- Data replication.
2268
- When reading data, the engine is only required to extract the necessary set of columns. However, in some cases, the query may be partially processed inside the table engine.
2269

2270
Note that for most serious tasks, you should use engines from the MergeTree family.
2271 2272


2273
==TinyLog==
2274

2275
The simplest table engine, which stores data on a disk.
2276 2277 2278 2279 2280 2281 2282 2283 2284
Each column is stored in a separate compressed file.
When writing, data is appended to the end of files.
Concurrent data access is not restricted in any way:
- If you are simultaneously reading from a table and writing to it in a different query, the read operation will complete with an error.
- If you are writing to a table in multiple queries simultaneously, the data will be broken.
The typical way to use this table is write-once: first just write the data one time, then read it as many times as needed.
Queries are executed in a single stream. In other words, this engine is intended for relatively small tables (recommended up to 1,000,000 rows).
It makes sense to use this table engine if you have many small tables, since it is simpler than the Log engine (fewer files need to be opened).
The situation when you have a large number of small tables guarantees poor productivity, but may already be used when working with another DBMS, and you may find it easier to switch to using TinyLog types of tables.
2285
Indexes are not supported.
2286

2287
In Yandex.Metrica, TinyLog tables are used for intermediary data that is processed in small batches.
2288 2289


2290
==Log==
2291

2292 2293
Log differs from TinyLog in that a small file of &quot;marks&quot; resides with the column files. These marks are written on every data block and contain offsets - where to start reading the file in order to skip the specified number of rows. This makes it possible to read table data in multiple threads. For concurrent data access, the read operations can be performed simultaneously, while write operations block reads and each other.
The Log engine does not support indexes. Similarly, if writing to a table failed, the table is broken, and reading from it returns an error. The Log engine is appropriate for temporary data, write-once tables, and for testing or demonstration purposes.
2294 2295


2296
==Memory==
2297

2298
The Memory engine stores data in RAM, in uncompressed form. Data is stored in exactly the same form as it is received when read. In other words, reading from this table is completely free.
2299 2300 2301 2302
Concurrent data access is synchronized. Locks are short: read and write operations don&#39;t block each other.
Indexes are not supported. Reading is parallelized.
Maximal productivity (over 10 GB/sec) is reached on simple queries, because there is no reading from the disk, decompressing, or deserializing data. (We should note that in many cases, the productivity of the MergeTree engine is almost as high.)
When restarting a server, data disappears from the table and the table becomes empty.
2303
Normally, using this table engine is not justified. However, it can be used for tests, and for tasks where maximum speed is required on a relatively small number of rows (up to approximately 100,000,000).
2304

2305
The Memory engine is used by the system for temporary tables with external query data (see the section &quot;External data for processing a query&quot;), and for implementing GLOBAL IN (see the section &quot;IN operators&quot;).
2306 2307


2308
==Merge==
2309

2310
The Merge engine (not to be confused with MergeTree) does not store data itself, but allows reading from any number of other tables simultaneously.
2311
Reading is automatically parallelized. Writing to a table is not supported. When reading, the indexes of tables that are actually being read are used, if they exist.
2312
The Merge engine accepts parameters: the database name and a regular expression for tables. Example:
2313

2314
%%Merge(hits, &#39;^WatchLog&#39;)%%
2315

2316
- Data will be read from the tables in the &#39;hits&#39; database with names that match the regex &#39;^WatchLog&#39;.
2317

2318
Instead of the database name, you can use a constant expression that returns a string. For example, %%currentDatabase()%%.
2319

2320
Regular expressions are re2 (similar to PCRE), case-sensitive. See the notes about escaping symbols in regular expressions in the &quot;match&quot; section.
2321

2322 2323
When selecting tables to read, the Merge table itself will not be selected, even if it matches the regex. This is to avoid loops.
It is possible to create two Merge tables that will endlessly try to read each others&#39; data. But don&#39;t do this.
2324

2325
The typical way to use the Merge engine is for working with a large number of TinyLog tables as if with a single table.
2326

2327
===Virtual columns===
2328

2329
Virtual columns are columns that are provided by the table engine, regardless of the table definition. In other words, these columns are not specified in CREATE TABLE, but they are accessible for SELECT.
2330

2331
Virtual columns differ from normal columns in the following ways:
2332 2333 2334 2335
- They are not specified in table definitions.
- Data can&#39;t be added to them with INSERT.
- When using INSERT without specifying the list of columns, virtual columns are ignored.
- They are not selected when using the asterisk (SELECT *).
2336
- Virtual columns are not shown in SHOW CREATE TABLE and DESC TABLE queries.
2337

2338
A Merge table contains the virtual column <b>_table</b> of the String type. (If the table already has a &#39;_table&#39; column, the virtual column is named &#39;_table1&#39;, and if it already has &#39;_table1&#39;, it is named &#39;_table2&#39;, and so on.) It contains the name of the table that data was read from.
2339

2340
If the WHERE or PREWHERE clause contains conditions for the &#39;_table&#39; column that do not depend on other table columns (as one of the conjunction elements, or as an entire expression), these conditions are used as an index. The conditions are performed on a data set of table names to read data from, and the read operation will be performed from only those tables that the condition was triggered on.
2341 2342


2343
==Distributed==
2344

2345
The Distributed engine does not store data itself, but allows distributed query processing on multiple servers.
2346 2347
Reading is automatically parallelized. During a read, the table indexes on remote servers are used, if there are any.
The Distributed engine accepts parameters: the cluster name in the server&#39;s config file, the name of a remote database, the name of a remote table, and (optionally) a sharding key.
2348
Example:
2349

2350
%%Distributed(calcs, default, hits[, sharding_key])%%
2351

2352
- Data will be read from all servers in the &#39;calcs&#39; cluster, from the &#39;default.hits&#39; table located on every server in the cluster.
2353
Data is not only read, but is partially processed on the remote servers (to the extent that this is possible).
2354
For example, for a query with GROUP BY, data will be aggregated on remote servers, and the intermediate states of aggregate functions will be sent to the requestor server. Then data will be further aggregated.
2355

2356
Instead of the database name, you can use a constant expression that returns a string. For example, %%currentDatabase()%%.
2357

2358
calcs - The cluster name in the server&#39;s config file.
2359

2360
Clusters are set like this:
2361

2362
%%
2363 2364 2365 2366 2367 2368 2369 2370 2371 2372 2373 2374 2375 2376 2377 2378 2379 2380 2381 2382 2383 2384 2385 2386 2387 2388 2389 2390 2391 2392
&lt;remote_servers>
	&lt;logs>
		&lt;shard>
			&lt;!-- Optional. Shard weight when writing data. By default, 1. -->
			&lt;weight>1&lt;/weight>
			&lt;!-- Optional. Whether to write data to just one of the replicas. By default, false - write data to all of the replicas. -->
			&lt;internal_replication>false&lt;/internal_replication>
			&lt;replica>
				&lt;host>example01-01-1&lt;/host>
				&lt;port>9000&lt;/port>
			&lt;/replica>
			&lt;replica>
				&lt;host>example01-01-2&lt;/host>
				&lt;port>9000&lt;/port>
			&lt;/replica>
		&lt;/shard>
		&lt;shard>
			&lt;weight>2&lt;/weight>
			&lt;internal_replication>false&lt;/internal_replication>
			&lt;replica>
				&lt;host>example01-02-1&lt;/host>
				&lt;port>9000&lt;/port>
			&lt;/replica>
			&lt;replica>
				&lt;host>example01-02-2&lt;/host>
				&lt;port>9000&lt;/port>
			&lt;/replica>
		&lt;/shard>
	&lt;/logs>
&lt;/remote_servers>
2393
%%
2394

2395 2396
Here a cluster is defined with the name &#39;logs&#39; that consists of two shards, each of which contains two replicas. Shards refer to the servers that contain different parts of the data (in order to read all the data, you must access all the shards).
Replicas are duplicating servers (in order to read all the data, you can access the data on any one of the replicas).
2397

2398
For each server, there are several parameters: mandatory: 'host', 'port', and optional: 'user', 'password'.
2399 2400 2401
<b>host</b> - address of remote server. May be specified as domain name or IPv4 or IPv6 address. If you specify domain, server will perform DNS lookup at startup, and result will be cached till server shutdown. If DNS request is failed, server won't start. If you are changing DNS records, restart the server for new records to take effect.
<b>port</b> - TCP-port for interserver communication (tcp_port in configuration file, usually 9000). Don't get confused with http_port.
<b>user</b> - user name to connect to remote server. By default user is 'default'. This user must have access rights to connect to remote server. Access rights are managed in users.xml configuration file. For additional info, consider "Access rights" section.
2402
<b>password</b> - password to log in to remote server, in plaintext. Default is empty string.
2403

2404
When specifying replicas, one of the available replicas will be selected for each of the shards when reading. You can configure the algorithm for load balancing (the preference for which replica to access) - see the &#39;load_balancing&#39; setting.
2405
If the connection with the server is not established, there will be an attempt to connect with a short timeout. If the connection failed, the next replica will be selected, and so on for all the replicas. If the connection attempt failed for all the replicas, the attempt will be repeated the same way, several times.
2406
This works in favor of resiliency, but does not provide complete fault tolerance: a remote server might accept the connection, but might not work, or work poorly.
2407

2408
You can specify just one of the shards (in this case, query processing should be called remote, rather than distributed) or up to any number of shards. In each shard, you can specify from one to any number of replicas. You can specify a different number of replicas for each shard.
2409

2410
You can specify as many clusters as you wish in the configuration.
2411

2412
To view your clusters, use the &#39;system.clusters&#39; table.
2413

2414
The Distributed engine allows working with a cluster like a local server. However, the cluster is inextensible: you must write its configuration in the server config file (even better, for all the cluster&#39;s servers).
2415

2416
There is no support for Distributed tables that look at other Distributed tables (except in cases when a Distributed table only has one shard). As an alternative, make the Distributed table look at the &quot;final&quot; tables.
2417

2418
The Distributed engine requires writing clusters to the config file. Adding clusters and servers requires restarting. If you need to send a query to an unknown set of shards and replicas each time, you don&#39;t need to create a Distributed table - use the &#39;remote&#39; table function instead. See the section &quot;Table functions&quot;.
2419

2420
There are two methods for writing data to a cluster:
2421

2422
First, you can define which servers to write which data to, and perform the write directly on each shard. In other words, perform INSERT in the tables that the distributed table &quot;looks at&quot;.
2423
This is the most flexible solution - you can use any sharding scheme, which could be non-trivial due to the requirements of the subject area.
2424
This is also the most optimal solution, since data can be written to different shards completely independently.
2425

2426 2427
Second, you can perform INSERT in a Distributed table. In this case, the table will distribute the inserted data across servers itself.
In order to write to a Distributed table, it must have a sharding key set (the last parameter). In addition, if there is only one shard, the write operation works without specifying the sharding key, since it doesn&#39;t have any meaning in this case.
2428

2429
Each shard can have a weight defined in the config file. By default, the weight is equal to one. Data is distributed across shards in the amount proportional to the shard weight. For example, if there are two shards and the first has a weight of 9 while the second has a weight of 10, the first will be sent 9 / 19 parts of the rows, and the second will be sent 10 / 19.
2430

2431
Each shard can have the &#39;internal_replication&#39; parameter defined in the config file.
2432

2433
If this parameter is set to &#39;true&#39;, the write operation selects the first healthy replica and writes data to it. Use this alternative if the Distributed table &quot;looks at&quot; replicated tables. In other words, if the table where data will be written is going to replicate them itself.
2434

2435
If it is set to &#39;false&#39; (the default), data is written to all replicas. In essence, this means that the Distributed table replicates data itself. This is worse than using replicated tables, because the consistency of replicas is not checked, and over time they will contain slightly different data.
2436

2437
To select the shard that a row of data is sent to, the sharding expression is analyzed, and its remainder is taken from dividing it by the total weight of the shards. The row is sent to the shard that corresponds to the half-interval of the remainders from &#39;prev_weight&#39; to &#39;prev_weights + weight&#39;, where &#39;prev_weights&#39; is the total weight of the shards with the smallest number, and &#39;weight&#39; is the weight of this shard. For example, if there are two shards, and the first has a weight of 9 while the second has a weight of 10, the row will be sent to the first shard for the remainders from the range [0, 9), and to the second for the remainders from the range [10, 19).
2438

2439
The sharding expression can be any expression from constants and table columns that returns an integer. For example, you can use the expression &#39;rand()&#39; for random distribution of data, or &#39;UserID&#39; for distribution by the remainder from dividing the user&#39;s ID (then the data of a single user will reside on a single shard, which simplifies running IN and JOIN by users). If one of the columns is not distributed evenly enough, you can wrap it in a hash function: intHash64(UserID).
2440

2441
A simple remainder from division is a limited solution for sharding and isn&#39;t always appropriate. It works for medium and large volumes of data (dozens of servers), but not for very large volumes of data (hundreds of servers or more). In the latter case, use the sharding scheme required by the subject area, rather than using entries in Distributed tables.
2442

2443
When using Replicated tables, it is possible to reshard data - look at "Resharding" section. But in many cases, better to do without it. SELECT queries are sent to all the shards, and work regardless of how data is distributed across the shards (they can be distributed completely randomly). When you add a new shard, you don&#39;t have to transfer the old data to it. You can write new data with a heavier weight - the data will be distributed slightly unevenly, but queries will work correctly and efficiently.
2444

2445
You should be concerned about the sharding scheme in the following cases:
2446
- Queries are used that require joining data (IN or JOIN) by a specific key. If data is sharded by this key, you can use local IN or JOIN instead of GLOBAL IN or GLOBAL JOIN, which is much more efficient.
2447
- A large number of servers is used (hundreds or more) with a large number of small queries (queries of individual clients - websites, advertisers, or partners). In order for the small queries to not affect the entire cluster, it makes sense to locate data for a single client on a single shard. Alternatively, as we&#39;ve done in Yandex.Metrica, you can set up bi-level sharding: divide the entire cluster into &quot;layers&quot;, where a layer may consist of multiple shards. Data for a single client is located on a single layer, but shards can be added to a layer as necessary, and data is randomly distributed within them. Distributed tables are created for each layer, and a single shared distributed table is created for global queries.
2448

2449 2450
Data is written asynchronously. For an INSERT to a Distributed table, the data block is just written to the local file system. The data is sent to the remote servers in the background as soon as possible. You should check whether data is sent successfully by checking the list of files (data waiting to be sent) in the table directory:
/opt/clickhouse/data/<i>database</i>/<i>table</i>/.
2451

2452
If the server ceased to exist or had a rough restart (for example, after a device failure) after an INSERT to a Distributed table, the inserted data might be lost. If a damaged data part is detected in the table directory, it is transferred to the &#39;broken&#39; subdirectory and no longer used.
2453 2454


2455
==MergeTree==
2456

2457 2458
The MergeTree engine supports an index by primary key and by date, and provides the possibility to update data in real time.
This is the most advanced table engine in ClickHouse. Don&#39;t confuse it with the Merge engine.
2459

2460 2461
The engine accepts parameters: the name of a Date type column containing the date, a sampling expression (optional), a tuple that defines the table&#39;s primary key, and the index granularity.
Example:
2462

2463 2464
Example without sampling support:
%%MergeTree(EventDate, (CounterID, EventDate), 8192)%%
2465

2466 2467
Example with sampling support:
%%MergeTree(EventDate, intHash32(UserID), (CounterID, EventDate, intHash32(UserID)), 8192)%%
2468

2469
A MergeTree type table must have a separate column containing the date. In this example, it is the &#39;EventDate&#39; column. The type of the date column must be &#39;Date&#39; (not &#39;DateTime&#39;).
2470

2471
The primary key may be a tuple from any expressions (usually this is just a tuple of columns), or a single expression.
2472

2473
The sampling expression (optional) can be any expression. It must also be present in the primary key. The example uses a hash of user IDs to pseudo-randomly disperse data in the table for each CounterID and EventDate. In other words, when using the SAMPLE clause in a query, you get an evenly pseudo-random sample of data for a subset of users.
2474

2475
The table is implemented as a set of parts. Each part is sorted by the primary key. In addition, each part has the minimum and maximum date assigned. When inserting in the table, a new sorted part is created. The merge process is periodically initiated in the background. When merging, several parts are selected, usually the smallest ones, and then merged into one large sorted part.
2476

2477
In other words, incremental sorting occurs when inserting to the table. Merging is implemented so that the table always consists of a small number of sorted parts, and the merge itself doesn&#39;t do too much work.
2478

2479
During insertion, data belonging to different months is separated into different parts. The parts that correspond to different months are never combined. The purpose of this is to provide local data modification (for ease in backups).
2480

2481
Parts are combined up to a certain size threshold, so there aren&#39;t any merges that are too long.
2482

2483
For each part, an index file is also written. The index file contains the primary key value for every &#39;index_granularity&#39; row in the table. In other words, this is an abbreviated index of sorted data.
2484

2485
For columns, &quot;marks&quot; are also written to each &#39;index_granularity&#39; row so that data can be read in a specific range.
2486

2487
When reading from a table, the SELECT query is analyzed for whether indexes can be used. An index can be used if the WHERE or PREWHERE clause has an expression (as one of the conjunction elements, or entirely) that represents an equality or inequality comparison operation, or if it has IN above columns that are in the primary key or date, or Boolean operators over them.
2488

2489
Thus, it is possible to quickly run queries on one or many ranges of the primary key. In the example given, queries will work quickly for a specific counter, for a specific counter and range of dates, for a specific counter and date, for multiple counters and a range of dates, and so on.
2490

2491 2492 2493
%%SELECT count() FROM table WHERE EventDate = toDate(now()) AND CounterID = 34%%
%%SELECT count() FROM table WHERE EventDate = toDate(now()) AND (CounterID = 34 OR CounterID = 42)%%
%%SELECT count() FROM table WHERE ((EventDate >= toDate(&#39;2014-01-01&#39;) AND EventDate &lt;= toDate(&#39;2014-01-31&#39;)) OR EventDate = toDate(&#39;2014-05-01&#39;)) AND CounterID IN (101500, 731962, 160656) AND (CounterID = 101500 OR EventDate != toDate(&#39;2014-05-01&#39;))%%
2494

2495
All of these cases will use the index by date and by primary key. The index is used even for complex expressions. Reading from the table is organized so that using the index can&#39;t be slower than a full scan.
2496

2497 2498
In this example, the index can&#39;t be used:
%%SELECT count() FROM table WHERE CounterID = 34 OR URL LIKE &#39;%upyachka%&#39;%%
2499

2500
The index by date only allows reading those parts that contain dates from the desired range. However, a data part may contain data for many dates (up to an entire month), while within a single part the data is ordered by the primary key, which might not contain the date as the first column. Because of this, using a query with only a date condition that does not specify the primary key prefix will cause more data to be read than for a single date.
2501

2502
For concurrent table access, we use multi-versioning. In other words, when a table is simultaneously read and updated, data is read from a set of parts that is current at the time of the query. There are no lengthy locks. Inserts do not get in the way of read operations.
2503

2504
Reading from a table is automatically parallelized.
2505

2506
The OPTIMIZE query is supported, which calls an extra merge step.
2507

2508
You can use a single large table and continually add data to it in small chunks - this is what MergeTree is intended for.
2509

2510
Data replication is possible for all types of tables in the MergeTree family (see the section &quot;Data replication&quot;).
2511 2512


2513
==CollapsingMergeTree==
2514

2515
This engine differs from MergeTree in that it allows automatic deletion, or &quot;collapsing&quot; certain pairs of rows when merging.
2516

2517
Yandex.Metrica has normal logs (such as hit logs) and change logs. Change logs are used for incrementally calculating statistics on data that is constantly changing. Examples are the log of session changes, or logs of changes to user histories. Sessions are constantly changing in Yandex.Metrica. For example, the number of hits per session increases. We refer to changes in any object as a pair (?old values, ?new values). Old values may be missing if the object was created. New values may be missing if the object was deleted. If the object was changed, but existed previously and was not deleted, both values are present. In the change log, one or two entries are made for each change. Each entry contains all the attributes that the object has, plus a special attribute for differentiating between the old and new values. When objects change, only the new entries are added to the change log, and the existing ones are not touched.
2518

2519
The change log makes it possible to incrementally calculate almost any statistics. To do this, we need to consider &quot;new&quot; rows with a plus sign, and &quot;old&quot; rows with a minus sign. In other words, incremental calculation is possible for all statistics whose algebraic structure contains an operation for taking the inverse of an element. This is true of most statistics. We can also calculate &quot;idempotent&quot; statistics, such as the number of unique visitors, since the unique visitors are not deleted when making changes to sessions.
2520

2521
This is the main concept that allows Yandex.Metrica to work in real time.
2522

2523
CollapsingMergeTree accepts an additional parameter - the name of an Int8-type column that contains the row&#39;s &quot;sign&quot;. Example:
2524

2525
%%CollapsingMergeTree(EventDate, (CounterID, EventDate, intHash32(UniqID), VisitID), 8192, Sign)%%
2526

2527
Here, &#39;Sign&#39; is a column containing -1 for &quot;old&quot; values and 1 for &quot;new&quot; values.
2528

2529
When merging, each group of consecutive identical primary key values (columns for sorting data) is reduced to no more than one row with the column value &#39;sign_column = -1&#39; (the &quot;negative row&quot;) and no more than one row with the column value &#39;sign_column = 1&#39; (the &quot;positive row&quot;). In other words, entries from the change log are collapsed.
2530

2531
If the number of positive and negative rows matches, the first negative row and the last positive row are written.
2532 2533
If there is one more positive row than negative rows, only the last positive row is written.
If there is one more negative row than positive rows, only the first negative row is written.
2534
Otherwise, there will be a logical error and none of the rows will be written. (A logical error can occur if the same section of the log was accidentally inserted more than once. The error is just recorded in the server log, and the merge continues.)
2535

2536
Thus, collapsing should not change the results of calculating statistics.
2537
Changes are gradually collapsed so that in the end only the last value of almost every object is left.
2538
Compared to MergeTree, the CollapsingMergeTree engine allows a multifold reduction of data volume.
2539

2540
There are several ways to get completely &quot;collapsed&quot; data from a CollapsingMergeTree table:
2541
1. Write a query with GROUP BY and aggregate functions that accounts for the sign. For example, to calculate quantity, write &#39;sum(Sign)&#39; instead of &#39;count()&#39;. To calculate the sum of something, write &#39;sum(Sign * x)&#39; instead of &#39;sum(x)&#39;, and so on, and also add &#39;HAVING sum(Sign) > 0&#39;. Not all amounts can be calculated this way. For example, the aggregate functions &#39;min&#39; and &#39;max&#39; can&#39;t be rewritten.
2542
2. If you must extract data without aggregation (for example, to check whether rows are present whose newest values match certain conditions), you can use the FINAL modifier for the FROM clause. This approach is significantly less efficient.
2543 2544


2545
==SummingMergeTree==
2546

2547
This engine differs from MergeTree in that it totals data while merging.
2548

2549
%%SummingMergeTree(EventDate, (OrderID, EventDate, BannerID, ...), 8192)%%
2550

2551
The columns to total are implicit. When merging, all rows with the same primary key value (in the example, OrderId, EventDate, BannerID, ...) have their values totaled in numeric columns that are not part of the primary key.
2552

2553
%%SummingMergeTree(EventDate, (OrderID, EventDate, BannerID, ...), 8192, (Shows, Clicks, Cost, ...))%%
2554

2555
The columns to total are set explicitly (the last parameter - Shows, Clicks, Cost, ...). When merging, all rows with the same primary key value have their values totaled in the specified columns. The specified columns also must be numeric and must not be part of the primary key.
2556

2557
If the values were null in all of these columns, the row is deleted. (The exception is cases when the data part would not have any rows left in it.)
2558

2559
For the other rows that are not part of the primary key, the first value that occurs is selected when merging.
2560

2561
Summation is not performed for a read operation. If it is necessary, write the appropriate GROUP BY.
2562

2563
In addition, a table can have nested data structures that are processed in a special way.
2564 2565 2566 2567
If the name of a nested table ends in &#39;Map&#39; and it contains at least two columns that meet the following criteria:
- for the first table, numeric ((U)IntN, Date, DateTime), we&#39;ll refer to it as &#39;key&#39;
- for other tables, arithmetic ((U)IntN, Float32/64), we&#39;ll refer to it as &#39;(values...)&#39;
then this nested table is interpreted as a mapping of key => (values...), and when merging its rows, the elements of two data sets are merged by &#39;key&#39; with a summation of the corresponding (values...).
2568
Examples:
2569

2570
%%
2571 2572 2573 2574
[(1, 100)] + [(2, 150)] -> [(1, 100), (2, 150)]
[(1, 100)] + [(1, 150)] -> [(1, 250)]
[(1, 100)] + [(1, 150), (2, 150)] -> [(1, 250), (2, 150)]
[(1, 100), (2, 150)] + [(1, -100)] -> [(2, 150)]
2575
%%
2576

2577
For nested data structures, you don&#39;t need to specify the columns as a list of columns for totaling.
2578

2579
This table engine is not particularly useful. Remember that when saving just pre-aggregated data, you lose some of the system&#39;s advantages.
2580 2581


2582
==AggregatingMergeTree==
2583

2584
This engine differs from MergeTree in that the merge combines the states of aggregate functions stored in the table for rows with the same primary key value.
2585

2586
In order for this to work, it uses the AggregateFunction data type and the -State and -Merge modifiers for aggregate functions. Let&#39;s examine it more closely.
2587

2588 2589
There is an AggregateFunction data type, which is a parametric data type. As parameters, the name of the aggregate function is passed, then the types of its arguments.
Examples:
2590

2591
%%CREATE TABLE t
2592 2593 2594 2595 2596
(
    column1 AggregateFunction(uniq, UInt64),
    column2 AggregateFunction(anyIf, String, UInt8),
    column3 AggregateFunction(quantiles(0.5, 0.9), UInt64)
) ENGINE = ...
2597
%%
2598

2599
This type of column stores the state of an aggregate function.
2600

2601 2602
To get this type of value, use aggregate functions with the &#39;State&#39; suffix.
Example: uniqState(UserID), quantilesState(0.5, 0.9)(SendTiming) - in contrast to the corresponding &#39;uniq&#39; and &#39;quantiles&#39; functions, these functions return the state, rather than the prepared value. In other words, they return an AggregateFunction type value.
2603

2604
An AggregateFunction type value can&#39;t be output in Pretty formats. In other formats, these types of values are output as implementation-specific binary data. The AggregateFunction type values are not intended for output or saving in a dump.
2605

2606 2607
The only useful thing you can do with AggregateFunction type values is combine the states and get a result, which essentially means to finish aggregation. Aggregate functions with the &#39;Merge&#39; suffix are used for this purpose.
Example: uniqMerge(UserIDState), where UserIDState has the AggregateFunction type.
2608

2609 2610
In other words, an aggregate function with the &#39;Merge&#39; suffix takes a set of states, combines them, and returns the result.
As an example, these two queries return the same result:
2611

2612
%%SELECT uniq(UserID) FROM table%%
2613

2614
%%SELECT uniqMerge(state) FROM (SELECT uniqState(UserID) AS state FROM table GROUP BY RegionID)%%
2615

2616
There is an AggregatingMergeTree engine. Its job during a merge is to combine the states of aggregate functions from different table rows with the same primary key value.
2617

2618
You can&#39;t use a normal INSERT to insert a row in a table containing AggregateFunction columns, because you can&#39;t explicitly define the AggregateFunction value. Instead, use INSERT SELECT with &#39;-State&#39; aggregate functions for inserting data.
2619

2620
With SELECT from an AggregatingMergeTree table, use GROUP BY and aggregate functions with the &#39;-Merge&#39; modifier in order to complete data aggregation.
2621

2622
You can use AggregatingMergeTree tables for incremental data aggregation, including for aggregated materialized views.
2623

2624 2625
Example:
Creating a materialized AggregatingMergeTree view that tracks the &#39;test.visits&#39; table:
2626

2627
%%
2628 2629 2630 2631 2632 2633 2634 2635 2636
CREATE MATERIALIZED VIEW test.basic
ENGINE = AggregatingMergeTree(StartDate, (CounterID, StartDate), 8192)
AS SELECT
    CounterID,
    StartDate,
    sumState(Sign)    AS Visits,
    uniqState(UserID) AS Users
FROM test.visits
GROUP BY CounterID, StartDate;
2637
%%
2638

2639
Inserting data in the &#39;test.visits&#39; table. Data will also be inserted in the view, where it will be aggregated:
2640

2641
%%
2642
INSERT INTO test.visits ...
2643
%%
2644

2645
Performing SELECT from the view using GROUP BY to finish data aggregation:
2646

2647
%%
2648 2649 2650 2651 2652 2653 2654
SELECT
    StartDate,
    sumMerge(Visits) AS Visits,
    uniqMerge(Users) AS Users
FROM test.basic
GROUP BY StartDate
ORDER BY StartDate;
2655
%%
2656

2657
You can create a materialized view like this and assign a normal view to it that finishes data aggregation.
2658

2659
Note that in most cases, using AggregatingMergeTree is not justified, since queries can be run efficiently enough on non-aggregated data.
2660 2661


2662
==Null==
2663

2664
When writing to a Null table, data is ignored. When reading from a Null table, the response is empty.
2665

2666
However, you can create a materialized view on a Null table, so the data written to the table will end up in the view.
2667 2668


2669
==View==
2670

2671
Used for implementing views (for more information, see the CREATE VIEW query). It does not store data, but only stores the specified SELECT query. When reading from a table, it runs this query (and deletes all unnecessary columns from the query).
2672 2673


2674
==MaterializedView==
2675

2676
Used for implementing materialized views (for more information, see CREATE MATERIALIZED VIEW). For storing data, it uses a different engine that was specified when creating the view. When reading from a table, it just uses this engine.
2677 2678


2679
==Set==
2680

2681
A data set that is always in RAM. It is intended for use on the right side of the IN operator (see the section &quot;IN operators&quot;).
2682

2683 2684
You can use INSERT to insert data in the table. New elements will be added to the data set, while duplicates will be ignored.
But you can&#39;t perform SELECT from the table. The only way to retrieve data is by using it in the right half of the IN operator.
2685

2686
Data is always located in RAM. For INSERT, the blocks of inserted data are also written to the directory of tables on the disk. When starting the server, this data is loaded to RAM. In other words, after restarting, the data remains in place.
2687

2688
For a rough server restart, the block of data on the disk might be lost or damaged. In the latter case, you may need to manually delete the file with damaged data.
2689 2690


2691
==Join==
2692

2693
A prepared data structure for JOIN that is always located in RAM.
2694

2695
%%Join(ANY|ALL, LEFT|INNER, k1[, k2, ...])%%
2696

2697
Engine parameters:  ANY|ALL - strictness, and LEFT|INNER - the type. These parameters are set without quotes and must match the JOIN that the table will be used for. k1, k2, ... are the key columns from the USING clause that the join will be made on.
2698

2699
The table can&#39;t be used for GLOBAL JOINs.
2700

2701
You can use INSERT to add data to the table, similar to the Set engine. For ANY, data for duplicated keys will be ignored. For ALL, it will be counted. You can&#39;t perform SELECT directly from the table. The only way to retrieve data is to use it as the &quot;right-hand&quot; table for JOIN.
2702

2703
Storing data on the disk is the same as for the Set engine.
2704 2705


2706
==Buffer==
2707

2708
Buffers the data to write in RAM, periodically flushing it to another table. During the read operation, data is read from the buffer and the other table simultaneously.
2709

2710
%%Buffer(database, table, num_layers, min_time, max_time, min_rows, max_rows, min_bytes, max_bytes)%%
2711

2712
Engine parameters:
2713 2714
database, table - The table to flush data to. Instead of the database name, you can use a constant expression that returns a string.
num_layers - The level of parallelism. Physically, the table will be represented as &#39;num_layers&#39; of independent buffers. The recommended value is 16.
2715
min_time, max_time, min_rows, max_rows, min_bytes, and max_bytes are conditions for flushing data from the buffer.
2716

2717
Data is flushed from the buffer and written to the destination table if all the &#39;min&#39; conditions or at least one &#39;max&#39; condition are met.
2718 2719
min_time, max_time - Condition for the time in seconds from the moment of the first write to the buffer.
min_rows, max_rows - Condition for the number of rows in the buffer.
2720
min_bytes, max_bytes - Condition for the number of bytes in the buffer.
2721

2722
During the write operation, data is inserted to a &#39;num_layers&#39; number of random buffers. Or, if the data part to insert is large enough (greater than &#39;max_rows&#39; or &#39;max_bytes&#39;), it is written directly to the destination table, omitting the buffer.
2723

2724
The conditions for flushing the data are calculated separately for each of the &#39;num_layers&#39; buffers. For example, if num_layers = 16 and max_bytes = 100000000, the maximum RAM consumption is 1.6 GB.
2725

2726
Example:
2727

2728
%%CREATE TABLE merge.hits_buffer AS merge.hits ENGINE = Buffer(merge, hits, 16, 10, 100, 10000, 1000000, 10000000, 100000000)%%
2729

2730
Creating a &#39;merge.hits_buffer&#39; table with the same structure as &#39;merge.hits&#39; and using the Buffer engine. When writing to this table, data is buffered in RAM and later written to the &#39;merge.hits&#39; table. 16 buffers are created. The data in each of them is flushed if either 100 seconds have passed, or one million rows have been written, or 100 MB of data have been written; or if simultaneously 10 seconds have passed and 10,000 rows and 10 MB of data have been written. For example, if just one row has been written, after 100 seconds it will be flushed, no matter what. But if many rows have been written, the data will be flushed sooner.
2731

2732
When the server is stopped, with DROP TABLE or DETACH TABLE, buffer data is also flushed to the destination table.
2733

2734
You can set empty strings in single quotation marks for the database and table name. This indicates the absence of a destination table. In this case, when the data flush conditions are reached, the buffer is simply cleared. This may be useful for keeping a window of data in memory.
2735

2736 2737
When reading from a Buffer table, data is processed both from the buffer and from the destination table (if there is one).
Note that the Buffer tables does not support an index. In other words, data in the buffer is fully scanned, which might be slow for large buffers. (For data in a subordinate table, the index it supports will be used.)
2738

2739
If the set of columns in the Buffer table doesn&#39;t match the set of columns in a subordinate table, a subset of columns that exist in both tables is inserted.
2740

2741 2742
If the types don&#39;t match for one of the columns in the Buffer table and a subordinate table, an error message is entered in the server log and the buffer is cleared.
The same thing happens if the subordinate table doesn&#39;t exist when the buffer is flushed.
2743

2744
If you need to run ALTER for a subordinate table and the Buffer table, we recommend first deleting the Buffer table, running ALTER for the subordinate table, then creating the Buffer table again.
2745

2746
If the server is restarted abnormally, the data in the buffer is lost.
2747

2748
PREWHERE, FINAL and SAMPLE do not work correctly for Buffer tables. These conditions are passed to the destination table, but are not used for processing data in the buffer. Because of this, we recommend only using the Buffer table for writing, while reading from the destination table.
2749

2750
When adding data to a Buffer, one of the buffers is locked. This causes delays if a read operation is simultaneously being performed from the table.
2751

2752
Data that is inserted to a Buffer table may end up in the subordinate table in a different order and in different blocks. Because of this, a Buffer table is difficult to use for writing to a CollapsingMergeTree correctly. To avoid problems, you can set &#39;num_layers&#39; to 1.
2753

2754
If the destination table is replicated, some expected characteristics of replicated tables are lost when writing to a Buffer table. The random changes to the order of rows and sizes of data parts cause data deduplication to quit working, which means it is not possible to have a reliable &#39;exactly once&#39; write to replicated tables.
2755

2756
Due to these disadvantages, we can only recommend using a Buffer table in rare cases.
2757

2758
A Buffer table is used when too many INSERTs are received from a large number of servers over a unit of time and data can&#39;t be buffered before insertion, which means the INSERTs can&#39;t run fast enough.
2759

2760
Note that it doesn&#39;t make sense to insert data one row at a time, even for Buffer tables. This will only produce a speed of a few thousand rows per second, while inserting larger blocks of data can produce over a million rows per second (see the section &quot;Performance&quot;).
2761 2762


2763
==Data replication==
2764

2765 2766 2767 2768
===ReplicatedMergeTree===
===ReplicatedCollapsingMergeTree===
===ReplicatedAggregatingMergeTree===
===ReplicatedSummingMergeTree===
2769

2770
Replication is only supported for tables in the MergeTree family. Replication works at the level of an individual table, not the entire server. A server can store both replicated and non-replicated tables at the same time.
2771

2772 2773
INSERT and ALTER are replicated (for more information, see ALTER). Compressed data is replicated, not query texts.
The CREATE, DROP, ATTACH, DETACH, and RENAME queries are not replicated. In other words, they belong to a single server. The CREATE TABLE query creates a new replicatable table on the server where the query is run. If this table already exists on other servers, it adds a new replica. The DROP TABLE query deletes the replica located on the server where the query is run. The RENAME query renames the table on one of the replicas. In other words, replicated tables can have different names on different replicas.
2774

2775
Replication is not related to sharding in any way. Replication works independently on each shard.
2776

2777
Replication is an optional feature. To use replication, set the addresses of the ZooKeeper cluster in the config file. Example:
2778

2779
%%
2780 2781 2782 2783 2784 2785 2786 2787 2788 2789 2790 2791 2792 2793
&lt;zookeeper>
	&lt;node index=&quot;1&quot;>
		&lt;host>example1&lt;/host>
		&lt;port>2181&lt;/port>
	&lt;/node>
	&lt;node index=&quot;2&quot;>
		&lt;host>example2&lt;/host>
		&lt;port>2181&lt;/port>
	&lt;/node>
	&lt;node index=&quot;3&quot;>
		&lt;host>example3&lt;/host>
		&lt;port>2181&lt;/port>
	&lt;/node>
&lt;/zookeeper>
2794
%%
2795

2796
Use ZooKeeper version 3.4.5 or later. For example, the version in the Ubuntu Precise package is too old. You can get a newer version for Ubuntu Precise from the repository <a href="https://dist.yandex.net/metrika/stable/amd64/">https://dist.yandex.net/metrika/stable/amd64/</a>.
2797

2798
You can specify any existing ZooKeeper cluster - the system will use a directory on it for its own data (the directory is specified when creating a replicatable table).
2799

2800
If ZooKeeper isn&#39;t set in the config file, you can&#39;t create replicated tables, and any existing replicated tables will be read-only.
2801

2802
ZooKeeper isn&#39;t used for SELECT queries. In other words, replication doesn&#39;t affect the productivity of SELECT queries - they work just as fast as for non-replicated tables.
2803

2804
For each INSERT query (more precisely, for each inserted block of data; the INSERT query contains a single block, or per block for every max_insert_block_size = 1048576 rows), approximately ten entries are made in ZooKeeper in several transactions. This leads to slightly longer latencies for INSERT compared to non-replicated tables. But if you follow the recommendations to insert data in batches of no more than one INSERT per second, it doesn&#39;t create any problems. The entire ClickHouse cluster used for coordinating one ZooKeeper cluster has a total of several hundred INSERTs per second. The throughput on data inserts (the number of rows per second) is just as high as for non-replicated data.
2805

2806
For very large clusters, you can use different ZooKeeper clusters for different shards. However, this hasn&#39;t proven necessary on the Yandex.Metrica cluster (approximately 300 servers).
2807

O
Oleg Komarov 已提交
2808
Replication is asynchronous and multi-master. INSERT queries (as well as ALTER) can be sent to any available server. Data is inserted on this server, then sent to the other servers. Because it is asynchronous, recently inserted data appears on the other replicas with some latency. If a part of the replicas is not available, the data on them is written when they become available. If a replica is available, the latency is the amount of time it takes to transfer the block of compressed data over the network.
2809

2810
There are no quorum writes. You can&#39;t write data with confirmation that it was received by more than one replica. If you write a batch of data to one replica and the server with this data ceases to exist before the data has time to get to the other replicas, this data will be lost.
2811

2812
Each block of data is written atomically. The INSERT query is divided into blocks up to max_insert_block_size = 1048576 rows. In other words, if the INSERT query has less than 1048576 rows, it is made atomically.
2813

2814
Blocks of data are duplicated. For multiple writes of the same data block (data blocks of the same size containing the same rows in the same order), the block is only written once. The reason for this is in case of network failures when the client application doesn&#39;t know if the data was written to the DB, so the INSERT query can simply be repeated. It doesn&#39;t matter which replica INSERTs were sent to with identical data - INSERTs are idempotent. This only works for the last 100 blocks inserted in a table.
2815

2816
During replication, only the source data to insert is transferred over the network. Further data transformation (merging) is coordinated and performed on all the replicas in the same way. This minimizes network usage, which means that replication works well when replicas reside in different datacenters. (Note that duplicating data in different datacenters is the main goal of replication.)
2817

2818
You can have any number of replicas of the same data. Yandex.Metrica uses double replication in production. Each server uses RAID-5 or RAID-6, and RAID-10 in some cases. This is a relatively reliable and convenient solution.
2819

2820
The system monitors data synchronicity on replicas and is able to recover after a failure. Failover is automatic (for small differences in data) or semi-automatic (when data differs too much, which may indicate a configuration error).
2821 2822


2823
===Creating replicated tables===
2824

2825
The &#39;Replicated&#39; prefix is added to the table engine name. For example, ReplicatedMergeTree.
2826

2827
Two parameters are also added in the beginning of the parameters list - the path to the table in ZooKeeper, and the replica name in ZooKeeper.
2828

2829 2830
Example:
<span class="text-example">ReplicatedMergeTree(<b>&#39;/clickhouse/tables/{layer}-{shard}/hits&#39;</b>, <b>&#39;{replica}&#39;</b>, EventDate, intHash32(UserID), (CounterID, EventDate, intHash32(UserID), EventTime), 8192)</span>
2831

2832
As the example shows, these parameters can contain substitutions in curly brackets. The substituted values are taken from the &#39;macros&#39; section of the config file. Example:
2833

2834
%%
2835 2836 2837 2838 2839
&lt;macros>
	&lt;layer>05&lt;/layer>
	&lt;shard>02&lt;/shard>
	&lt;replica>example05-02-1.yandex.ru&lt;/replica>
&lt;/macros>
2840
%%
2841

2842 2843
The path to the table in ZooKeeper should be unique for each replicated table. Tables on different shards should have different paths.
In this case, the path consists of the following parts:
2844

2845
%%/clickhouse/tables/%% is the common prefix. We recommend using exactly this one.
2846

2847
%%{layer}-{shard}%% is the shard identifier. In this example it consists of two parts, since the Yandex.Metrica cluster uses bi-level sharding. For most tasks, you can leave just the {shard} substitution, which will be expanded to the shard identifier.
2848

2849
%%hits%% is the name of the node for the table in ZooKeeper. It is a good idea to make it the same as the table name. It is defined explicitly, because in contrast to the table name, it doesn&#39;t change after a RENAME query.
2850

2851
The replica name identifies different replicas of the same table. You can use the server name for this, as in the example. The name only needs to be unique within each shard.
2852

2853
You can define everything explicitly instead of using substitutions. This might be convenient for testing and for configuring small clusters, but it is inconvenient when working with large clusters.
2854

2855
Run CREATE TABLE on each replica. This query creates a new replicated table, or adds a new replica to an existing one.
2856

2857
If you add a new replica after the table already contains some data on other replicas, the data will be copied from the other replicas to the new one after running the query. In other words, the new replica syncs itself with the others.
2858

2859
To delete a replica, run DROP TABLE. However, only one replica is deleted - the one that resides on the server where you run the query.
2860 2861


2862
===Recovery after failures===
2863

2864
If ZooKeeper is unavailable when a server starts, replicated tables switch to read-only mode. The system periodically attempts to connect to ZooKeeper.
2865

2866
If ZooKeeper is unavailable during an INSERT, or an error occurs when interacting with ZooKeeper, an exception is thrown.
2867

2868
After connecting to ZooKeeper, the system checks whether the set of data in the local file system matches the expected set of data (ZooKeeper stores this information). If there are minor inconsistencies, the system resolves them by syncing data with the replicas.
2869

2870
If the system detects broken data parts (with the wrong size of files) or unrecognized parts (parts written to the file system but not recorded in ZooKeeper), it moves them to the &#39;detached&#39; subdirectory (they are not deleted). Any missing parts are copied from the replicas.
2871

2872
Note that ClickHouse does not perform any destructive actions such as automatically deleting a large amount of data.
2873

2874
When the server starts (or establishes a new session with ZooKeeper), it only checks the quantity and sizes of all files. If the file sizes match but bytes have been changed somewhere in the middle, this is not detected immediately, but only when attempting to read the data for a SELECT query. The query throws an exception about a non-matching checksum or size of a compressed block. In this case, data parts are added to the verification queue and copied from the replicas if necessary.
2875

2876
If the local set of data differs too much from the expected one, a safety mechanism is triggered. The server enters this in the log and refuses to launch. The reason for this is that this case may indicate a configuration error, such as if a replica on a shard was accidentally configured like a replica on a different shard. However, the thresholds for this mechanism are set fairly low, and this situation might occur during normal failure recovery. In this case, data is restored semi-automatically - by &quot;pushing a button&quot;.
2877

2878
To start recovery, create the node <span class="inline-example">/<i>path_to_table</i>/<i>replica_name</i>/flags/force_restore_data</span>  in ZooKeeper with any content, and launch the server. On start, the server deletes this flag and starts recovery.
2879 2880


2881
===Recovery after complete data loss===
2882

2883
If all data and metadata disappeared from one of the servers, follow these steps for recovery:
2884

2885
1. Install ClickHouse on the server. Define substitutions correctly in the config file that contains the shard identifier and replicas, if you use them.
2886

2887
2. If you had unreplicated tables that must be manually duplicated on the servers, copy their data from a replica (in the directory <span class="inline-example">/opt/clickhouse/data/<i>db_name</i>/<i>table_name</i>/</span>). If replicated tables had unreplicated parts, synchronize them as well. Note that these exist only if you migrated from MergeTree to ReplicatedMergeTree (see &quot;Converting from MergeTree to ReplicatedMergeTree&quot;).
2888

2889
3. Copy table definitions located in %%/opt/clickhouse/metadata/%% from a replica. If a shard or replica identifier is defined explicitly in the table definitions, correct it so that it corresponds to this replica. (Alternatively, launch the server and make all the ATTACH TABLE queries that should have been in the .sql files in %%/opt/clickhouse/metadata/%%.)
2890

2891
4. Create the <span class="inline-example">/<i>path_to_table</i>/<i>replica_name</i>/flags/force_restore_data</span> node in ZooKeeper with any content, and launch the server (restart it if it is already running). Data will be downloaded from replicas.
2892

2893
An alternative recovery option is to delete information about the lost replica from ZooKeeper ( <span class="inline-example">/<i>path_to_table</i>/<i>replica_name</i></span>), then create the replica again as described in &quot;Creating replicated tables&quot;.
2894

2895
There is no restriction on network bandwidth during recovery. Keep this in mind if you are restoring many replicas at once.
2896 2897


2898
===Converting from MergeTree to ReplicatedMergeTree===
2899

2900
From here on, we use &quot;MergeTree&quot; to refer to all the table engines in the MergeTree family, including ReplicatedMergeTree.
2901

2902
If you had a MergeTree table that was manually replicated, you can convert it to a replicatable table. You might need to do this if you have already collected a large amount of data in a MergeTree table and now you want to enable replication.
2903

2904
There are two ways to do this:
2905

2906
1. Leave the old data &quot;as is&quot; without syncing it.
2907

2908 2909
To do this, rename the existing MergeTree table, then create a ReplicatedMergeTree table with the old name.
In the directory with data for the new table (<span class="inline-example">/opt/clickhouse/data/<i>db_name</i>/<i>table_name</i>/</span>), create the &#39;unreplicated&#39; subdirectory and move the data from the old table to it. Then restart the server.
2910

2911
For read requests, the replicated table will also read from the &#39;unreplicated&#39; data set. The integrity of this data is not monitored in any way.
2912

2913
2. Add the old data to the set of replicatable data.
2914

2915
If the data differs on various replicas, first sync it, or delete this data on all the replicas except one.
2916

2917
Rename the existing MergeTree table, then create a ReplicatedMergeTree table with the old name.
2918
Move the data from the old table to the &#39;detached&#39; subdirectory inside the directory with the new table data (<span class="inline-example">/opt/clickhouse/data/<i>db_name</i>/<i>table_name</i>/</span>).
2919
Then run ALTER TABLE ATTACH PART on one of the replicas to add these data parts to the working set.
2920

2921
If exactly the same parts exist on the other replicas, they are added to the working set on them. If not, the parts are downloaded from the replica that has them.
2922 2923


2924
===Converting from ReplicatedMergeTree to MergeTree===
2925

2926
Create a MergeTree table with a different name. Move all the data from the directory with the ReplicatedMergeTree table data to the new table&#39;s data directory. Then delete the ReplicatedMergeTree table and restart the server.
2927

2928 2929
If you want to get rid of a ReplicatedMergeTree table without launching the server:
- Delete the corresponding .sql file in the metadata directory (%%/opt/clickhouse/metadata/%%).
2930
- Delete the corresponding path in ZooKeeper (<span class="inline-example">/<i>path_to_table</i>/<i>replica_name</i></span>).
2931
After this, you can launch the server, create a MergeTree table, move the data to its directory, and then restart the server.
2932 2933


2934
===Recovery when metadata in the ZooKeeper cluster is lost or damaged===
2935

2936
If you lost ZooKeeper, you can save data by moving it to an unreplicated table as described above.
2937 2938


2939 2940 2941 2942 2943 2944 2945 2946 2947 2948 2949 2950 2951 2952 2953 2954 2955 2956 2957 2958 2959 2960 2961 2962 2963 2964 2965
==Resharding==

%%ALTER TABLE t RESHARD [COPY] [PARTITION partition] TO <i>cluster description</i> USING <i>sharding key</i>%%

Query works only for Replicated tables and for Distributed tables that are looking at Replicated tables.

When executing, query first checks correctness of query, sufficiency of free space on nodes and writes to ZooKeeper at some path a task to to. Next work is done asynchronously.

For using resharding, you must specify path in ZooKeeper for task queue in configuration file:

%%
&lt;resharding&gt;
	&lt;task_queue_path&gt;/clickhouse/task_queue&lt;/task_queue_path&gt;
&lt;/resharding&gt;
%%

When running %%ALTER TABLE t RESHARD%% query, node in ZooKeeper is created if not exists.

Cluster description is list of shards with weights to distribute the data.
Shard is specified as address of table in ZooKeeper. Example: %%/clickhouse/tables/01-03/hits%%
Relative weight of shard (optional, default is 1) could be specified after %%WEIGHT%% keyword.
Example:

%%
ALTER TABLE merge.hits
RESHARD PARTITION 201501
TO
2966 2967 2968 2969
	'/clickhouse/tables/01-01/hits' WEIGHT 1,
	'/clickhouse/tables/01-02/hits' WEIGHT 2,
	'/clickhouse/tables/01-03/hits' WEIGHT 1,
	'/clickhouse/tables/01-04/hits' WEIGHT 1
2970 2971 2972 2973 2974 2975 2976 2977 2978 2979 2980 2981 2982 2983 2984 2985 2986 2987 2988 2989 2990 2991 2992 2993 2994 2995 2996 2997 2998 2999 3000 3001 3002 3003 3004 3005 3006 3007 3008 3009 3010 3011 3012 3013 3014 3015 3016 3017
USING UserID
%%

Sharding key (%%UserID%% in example) has same semantic as for Distributed tables. You could specify %%rand()%% as sharding key for random distribution of data.

When query is run, it checks:
- identity of table structure on all shards.
- availability of free space on local node in amount of partition size in bytes, with additional 10% reserve.
- availability of free space on all replicas of all specified shards, except local replica, if exists, in amount of patition size times ratio of shard weight to total weight of all shards, with additional 10% reserve.

Next, asynchronous processing of query is of following steps:

1. Split patition to parts on local node.
It merges all parts forming a partition and in the same time, splits them to several, according sharding key.
Result is placed to /reshard directory in table data directory.
Source parts doesn't modified and all process doesn't intervent table working data set.

2. Copying all parts to remote nodes (to each replica of corresponding shard).

3. Execution of queries %%ALTER TABLE t DROP PARTITION%% on local node and %%ALTER TABLE t ATTACH PARTITION%% on all shards.
Note: this operation is not atomic. There are time point when user could see absence of data.

When %%COPY%% keyword is specified, source data is not removed. It is suitable for copying data from one cluster to another with changing sharding scheme in same time.

4. Removing temporary data from local node.

When having multiple resharding queries, their tasks will be done sequentially.

Query in example is to reshard single partition.
If you don't specify partition in query, then tasks to reshard all partitions will be created. Example:

%%
ALTER TABLE merge.hits
RESHARD
TO ...
%%

When resharding Distributed tables, each shard will be resharded (corresponding query is sent to each shard).

You could reshard Distributed table to itself or to another table.

Resharding is intended for "old" data: in case when during job, resharded partition was modified, task for that partition will be cancelled.

On each server, resharding is done in single thread. It is doing that way to not disturb normal query processing.

As of June 2016, resharding is in "beta" state: it was tested only for small data sets - up to 5 TB.


3018 3019

</div>
3020
<div class="island">
3021 3022
<h1>System tables</h1>
</div>
3023
<div class="island content">
3024

3025
System tables are used for implementing part of the system&#39;s functionality, and for providing access to information about how the system is working.
3026 3027 3028
You can&#39;t delete a system table (but you can perform DETACH).
System tables don&#39;t have files with data on the disk or files with metadata. The server creates all the system tables when it starts.
System tables are read-only.
3029
System tables are located in the &#39;system&#39; database.
3030

3031
==system.one==
3032

3033
This table contains a single row with a single &#39;dummy&#39; UInt8 column containing the value 0.
3034
This table is used if a SELECT query doesn&#39;t specify the FROM clause.
3035
This is similar to the DUAL table found in other DBMSs.
3036

3037
==system.numbers==
3038

3039
This table contains a single UInt64 column named &#39;number&#39; that contains almost all the natural numbers starting from zero.
3040
You can use this table for tests, or if you need to do a brute force search.
3041
Reads from this table are not parallelized.
3042

3043
==system.numbers_mt==
3044

3045 3046
The same as &#39;system.numbers&#39; but reads are parallelized. The numbers can be returned in any order.
Used for tests.
3047

3048
==system.tables==
3049

3050
This table contains the String columns &#39;database&#39;, &#39;name&#39;, and &#39;engine&#39;.
3051 3052
Each table that the server knows about is entered in the &#39;system.tables&#39; table.
There is an issue: table engines are specified without parameters.
3053
This system table is used for implementing SHOW TABLES queries.
3054

3055
==system.databases==
3056

3057
This table contains a single String column called &#39;name&#39; - the name of a database.
3058
Each database that the server knows about has a corresponding entry in the table.
3059
This system table is used for implementing the SHOW DATABASES query.
3060

3061
==system.processes==
3062

3063
This system table is used for implementing the SHOW PROCESSLIST query.
3064
Columns:
3065
%%
3066 3067 3068 3069 3070 3071 3072 3073 3074 3075 3076 3077 3078 3079 3080 3081
user String              - Name of the user who made the request. For distributed query processing, this is the user who helped the requestor server send the query to this server, not the user who made the distributed request on the requestor server.

address String           - The IP address the request was made from. The same for distributed processing.

elapsed Float64          - The time in seconds since request execution started.

rows_read UInt64         - The number of rows read from the table. For distributed processing, on the requestor server, this is the total for all remote servers.

bytes_read UInt64        - The number of uncompressed bytes read from the table. For distributed processing, on the requestor server, this is the total for all remote servers.

total_rows_approx UInt64 - The approximation of the total number of rows that should be read. For distributed processing, on the requestor server, this is the total for all remote servers. It can be updated during request processing, when new sources to process become known.

memory_usage UInt64      - How much memory the request uses. It might not include some types of dedicated memory.

query String             - The query text. For INSERT, it doesn&#39;t include the data to insert.

3082 3083
query_id String          - Query ID, if defined.
%%
3084

3085
==system.events==
3086

3087
Contains information about the number of events that have occurred in the system. This is used for profiling and monitoring purposes.
3088
Example: The number of processed SELECT queries.
3089
Columns: &#39;event String&#39; - the event name, and &#39;value UInt64&#39; - the quantity.
3090

3091
==system.clusters==
3092

3093 3094
Contains information about clusters available in the config file and the servers in them.
Columns:
3095

3096
%%
3097 3098 3099 3100 3101 3102 3103 3104
cluster String      - Cluster name.
shard_num UInt32    - Number of a shard in the cluster, starting from 1.
shard_weight UInt32 - Relative weight of a shard when writing data.
replica_num UInt32  - Number of a replica in the shard, starting from 1.
host_name String    - Host name as specified in the config.
host_address String - Host&#39;s IP address obtained from DNS.
port UInt16         - The port used to access the server.
user String         - The username to use for connecting to the server.
3105
%%
3106

3107
==system.columns==
3108

3109 3110
Contains information about the columns in all tables.
You can use this table to get information similar to DESCRIBE TABLE, but for multiple tables at once.
3111

3112
%%
3113 3114 3115 3116 3117 3118
database String           - Name of the database the table is located in.
table String              - Table name.
name String               - Column name.
type String               - Column type.
default_type String       - Expression type (DEFAULT, MATERIALIZED, ALIAS) for the default value, or an empty string if it is not defined.
default_expression String - Expression for the default value, or an empty string if it is not defined.
3119
%%
3120

3121
==system.dictionaries==
3122

3123 3124
Contains information about external dictionaries.
Columns:
3125

3126
%%
3127 3128 3129 3130 3131 3132 3133 3134 3135 3136 3137 3138 3139
name String                   - Dictionary name.
type String                   - Dictionary type: Flat, Hashed, Cache.
origin String                 - Path to the config file where the dictionary is described.
attribute.names Array(String) - Array of attribute names provided by the dictionary.
attribute.types Array(String) - Corresponding array of attribute types provided by the dictionary.
has_hierarchy UInt8           - Whether the dictionary is hierarchical.
bytes_allocated UInt64        - The amount of RAM used by the dictionary.
hit_rate Float64              - For cache dictionaries, the percent of usage for which the value was in the cache.
element_count UInt64          - The number of items stored in the dictionary.
load_factor Float64           - The filled percentage of the dictionary (for a hashed dictionary, it is the filled percentage of the hash table).
creation_time DateTime        - Time spent for the creation or last successful reload of the dictionary.
last_exception String         - Text of an error that occurred when creating or reloading the dictionary, if the dictionary couldn&#39;t be created.
source String                 - Text describing the data source for the dictionary.
3140
%%
3141

3142
Note that the amount of memory used by the dictionary is not proportional to the number of items stored in it. So for flat and cached dictionaries, all the memory cells are pre-assigned, regardless of how full the dictionary actually is.
3143 3144


3145
==system.functions==
3146

3147 3148
Contains information about normal and aggregate functions.
Columns:
3149

3150
%%
3151 3152
name String           - Function name.
is_aggregate UInt8    - Whether it is an aggregate function.
3153
%%
3154

3155
==system.merges==
3156

3157 3158
Contains information about merges currently in process for tables in the MergeTree family.
Columns:
3159

3160
%%
3161 3162 3163 3164 3165 3166 3167 3168 3169 3170 3171 3172
database String                    - Name of the database the table is located in.
table String                       - Name of the table.
elapsed Float64                    - Time in seconds since the merge started.
progress Float64                   - Percent of progress made, from 0 to 1.
num_parts UInt64                   - Number of parts to merge.
result_part_name String            - Name of the part that will be formed as the result of the merge.
total_size_bytes_compressed UInt64 - Total size of compressed data in the parts being merged.
total_size_marks UInt64            - Total number of marks in the parts being merged.
bytes_read_uncompressed UInt64     - Amount of bytes read, decompressed.
rows_read UInt64                   - Number of rows read.
bytes_written_uncompressed UInt64  - Amount of bytes written, uncompressed.
rows_written UInt64                - Number of rows written.
3173
%%
3174

3175
==system.parts==
3176

3177 3178
Contains information about parts of a table in the MergeTree family.
Columns:
3179

3180
%%
3181 3182 3183 3184 3185 3186 3187 3188 3189 3190 3191 3192
database String            - Name of the database where the table that this part belongs to is located.
table String               - Name of the table that this part belongs to.
engine String              - Name of the table engine, without parameters.
partition String           - Name of the partition, in the format YYYYMM.
name String                - Name of the part.
replicated UInt8           - Whether the part belongs to replicated data.
active UInt8               - Whether the part is used in a table, or is no longer needed and will be deleted soon. Inactive parts remain after merging.
marks UInt64               - Number of marks - multiply by the index granularity (usually 8192) to get the approximate number of rows in the part.
bytes UInt64               - Number of bytes when compressed.
modification_time DateTime - Time the directory with the part was modified. Usually corresponds to the part&#39;s creation time.
remove_time DateTime       - For inactive parts only - the time when the part became inactive.
refcount UInt32            - The number of places where the part is used. A value greater than 2 indicates that this part participates in queries or merges.
3193
%%
3194

3195
==system.replicas==
3196

3197
Contains information and status for replicated tables residing on the local server. This table can be used for monitoring. The table contains a row for every Replicated* table.
3198

3199
Example:
3200

3201
%%
3202 3203 3204 3205 3206 3207 3208 3209 3210 3211 3212 3213 3214 3215 3216 3217 3218 3219 3220 3221 3222 3223 3224 3225 3226 3227
SELECT *
FROM system.replicas
WHERE table = &#39;visits&#39;
FORMAT Vertical

Row 1:
──────
database:           merge
table:              visits
engine:             ReplicatedCollapsingMergeTree
is_leader:          1
is_readonly:        0
is_session_expired: 0
future_parts:       1
parts_to_check:     0
zookeeper_path:     /clickhouse/tables/01-06/visits
replica_name:       example01-06-1.yandex.ru
replica_path:       /clickhouse/tables/01-06/visits/replicas/example01-06-1.yandex.ru
columns_version:    9
queue_size:         1
inserts_in_queue:   0
merges_in_queue:    1
log_max_index:      596273
log_pointer:        596274
total_replicas:     2
active_replicas:    2
3228
%%
3229

3230
Columns:
3231

3232
%%
3233 3234 3235 3236 3237 3238 3239 3240 3241 3242 3243 3244 3245 3246 3247 3248 3249 3250 3251 3252 3253 3254 3255 3256 3257 3258 3259 3260 3261 3262 3263 3264 3265 3266 3267 3268 3269 3270 3271
database:          Database name.
table:              Table name.
engine:             Table engine name.

is_leader:          Whether the replica is the leader.
Only one replica can be the leader at a time. The leader is responsible for selecting background merges to perform.
Note that writes can be performed to any replica that is available and has a session in ZK, regardless of whether it is a leader.

is_readonly:        Whether the replica is in read-only mode.
This mode is turned on if the config doesn&#39;t have sections with ZK, if an unknown error occurred when reinitializing sessions in ZK, and during session reinitialization in ZK.

is_session_expired: Whether the session with ZK has expired.
Basically the same as &#39;is_readonly&#39;.

future_parts:       The number of data parts that will appear as the result of INSERTs or merges that haven&#39;t been done yet.

parts_to_check:     The number of data parts in the queue for verification.
A part is put in the verification queue if there is suspicion that it might be damaged.

zookeeper_path:     Path to table data in ZK.
replica_name:       Replica name in ZK. Different replicas of the same table have different names.
replica_path:      Path to replica data in ZK. The same as concatenating &#39;zookeeper_path/replicas/replica_path&#39;.

columns_version:    Version number of the table structure. Indicates how many times ALTER was performed. If replicas have different versions, it means some replicas haven&#39;t made all of the ALTERs yet.

queue_size:         Size of the queue for operations waiting to be performed. Operations include inserting blocks of data, merges, and certain other actions. It usually coincides with &#39;future_parts&#39;.

inserts_in_queue:   Number of inserts of blocks of data that need to be made. Insertions are usually replicated fairly quickly. If this number is large, it means something is wrong.

merges_in_queue:    The number of merges waiting to be made. Sometimes merges are lengthy, so this value may be greater than one for a long time.

The next 4 columns have a non-zero value only where there is an active session with ZK.

log_max_index:      Maximum entry number in the log of general activity.
log_pointer:        Maximum entry number from the log of general activity that the replica copied to its queue for execution, plus one.
If log_pointer is much smaller than log_max_index, something is wrong.

total_replicas:     The total number of known replicas of this table.
active_replicas:    The number of replicas of this table that have a session in ZK (i.e., the number of functioning replicas).
3272
%%
3273

3274 3275
If you request all the columns, the table may work a bit slowly, since several reads from ZK are made for each row.
If you don&#39;t request the last 4 columns (log_max_index, log_pointer, total_replicas, active_replicas), the table works quickly.
3276

3277
For example, you can check that everything is working correctly like this:
3278

3279
%%
3280 3281 3282 3283 3284 3285 3286 3287 3288 3289 3290 3291 3292 3293 3294 3295 3296 3297 3298 3299 3300 3301 3302 3303 3304 3305 3306
SELECT
    database,
    table,
    is_leader,
    is_readonly,
    is_session_expired,
    future_parts,
    parts_to_check,
    columns_version,
    queue_size,
    inserts_in_queue,
    merges_in_queue,
    log_max_index,
    log_pointer,
    total_replicas,
    active_replicas
FROM system.replicas
WHERE
       is_readonly
    OR is_session_expired
    OR future_parts > 20
    OR parts_to_check > 10
    OR queue_size > 20
    OR inserts_in_queue > 10
    OR log_max_index - log_pointer > 10
    OR total_replicas &lt; 2
    OR active_replicas &lt; total_replicas
3307
%%
3308

3309
If this query doesn&#39;t return anything, it means that everything is fine.
3310

3311
==system.settings==
3312

3313
Contains information about settings that are currently in use (i.e. used for executing the query you are using to read from the system.settings table).
3314

3315
Columns:
3316

3317
%%
3318 3319 3320
name String   - Setting name.
value String  - Setting value.
changed UInt8 - Whether the setting was explicitly defined in the config or explicitly changed.
3321
%%
3322

3323
Example:
3324

3325
%%
3326 3327 3328 3329 3330 3331 3332 3333 3334 3335
SELECT *
FROM system.settings
WHERE changed

┌─name───────────────────┬─value───────┬─changed─┐
│ max_threads            │ 8           │       1 │
│ use_uncompressed_cache │ 0           │       1 │
│ load_balancing         │ random      │       1 │
│ max_memory_usage       │ 10000000000 │       1 │
└────────────────────────┴─────────────┴─────────┘
3336
%%
3337 3338


3339
==system.zookeeper==
3340

3341 3342
Allows reading data from the ZooKeeper cluster defined in the config.
The query must have a &#39;path&#39; equality condition in the WHERE clause. This is the path in ZooKeeper for the children that you want to get data for.
3343

3344
Query SELECT * FROM system.zookeeper WHERE path = &#39;/clickhouse&#39; outputs data for all children on the /clickhouse node.
3345
To output data for all root nodes, write path = &#39;/&#39;.
3346
If the path specified in &#39;path&#39; doesn&#39;t exist, an exception will be thrown.
3347

3348
Columns:
3349

3350
%%
3351 3352 3353 3354 3355 3356 3357 3358 3359 3360 3361 3362 3363 3364
name String          - Name of the node.
path String          - Path to the node.
value String         - Value of the node.
dataLength Int32     - Size of the value.
numChildren Int32    - Number of children.
czxid Int64          - ID of the transaction that created the node.
mzxid Int64          - ID of the transaction that last changed the node.
pzxid Int64          - ID of the transaction that last added or removed children.
ctime DateTime       - Time of node creation.
mtime DateTime       - Time of the last node modification.
version Int32        - Node version - the number of times the node was changed.
cversion Int32       - Number of added or removed children.
aversion Int32       - Number of changes to ACL.
ephemeralOwner Int64 - For ephemeral nodes, the ID of the session that owns this node.
3365
%%
3366

3367
Example:
3368

3369
%%
3370 3371 3372 3373 3374 3375 3376 3377 3378 3379 3380 3381 3382 3383 3384 3385 3386 3387 3388 3389 3390 3391 3392 3393 3394 3395 3396 3397 3398 3399 3400 3401 3402 3403 3404 3405 3406 3407
SELECT *
FROM system.zookeeper
WHERE path = &#39;/clickhouse/tables/01-08/visits/replicas&#39;
FORMAT Vertical

Row 1:
──────
name:           example01-08-1.yandex.ru
value:
czxid:          932998691229
mzxid:          932998691229
ctime:          2015-03-27 16:49:51
mtime:          2015-03-27 16:49:51
version:        0
cversion:       47
aversion:       0
ephemeralOwner: 0
dataLength:     0
numChildren:    7
pzxid:          987021031383
path:           /clickhouse/tables/01-08/visits/replicas

Row 2:
──────
name:           example01-08-2.yandex.ru
value:
czxid:          933002738135
mzxid:          933002738135
ctime:          2015-03-27 16:57:01
mtime:          2015-03-27 16:57:01
version:        0
cversion:       37
aversion:       0
ephemeralOwner: 0
dataLength:     0
numChildren:    7
pzxid:          987021252247
path:           /clickhouse/tables/01-08/visits/replicas
3408
%%
3409 3410 3411 3412



</div>
3413
<div class="island">
3414 3415
<h1>Table functions</h1>
</div>
3416
<div class="island content">
3417

3418
Table functions can be specified in the FROM clause instead of the database and table names.
3419
Table functions can only be used if &#39;readonly&#39; is not set.
3420
Table functions aren&#39;t related to other functions.
3421

3422
==merge==
3423

3424 3425
%%merge(db_name, &#39;tables_regexp&#39;)%% creates a temporary Merge table. For more information, see the section &quot;Table engines, Merge&quot;.
The table structure is taken from the first table encountered that matches the regular expression.
3426

3427
==remote==
3428

3429 3430 3431
%%remote(&#39;addresses_expr&#39;, db, table[, &#39;user&#39;[, &#39;password&#39;]])%%
or %%remote(&#39;addresses_expr&#39;, db.table[, &#39;user&#39;[, &#39;password&#39;]])%%
- Allows accessing a remote server without creating a Distributed table.
3432

3433
%%addresses_expr%% - An expression that generates addresses of remote servers.
3434

3435
This may be just one server address. The server address is host:port, or just the host. The host can be specified as the server name, or as the IPv4 or IPv6 address. An IPv6 address is specified in square brackets. The port is the TCP port on the remote server. If the port is omitted, it uses %%tcp_port%% from the server&#39;s config file (by default, 9000).
3436

3437
Note: As an exception, when specifying an IPv6 address, the port is required.
3438

3439 3440
Examples:
%%
3441 3442 3443 3444 3445
example01-01-1
example01-01-1:9000
localhost
127.0.0.1
[::]:9000
3446
[2a02:6b8:0:1111::11]:9000%%
3447

3448
Multiple addresses can be comma-separated. In this case, the query goes to all the specified addresses (like to shards with different data) and uses distributed processing.
3449

3450 3451
Example:
%%example01-01-1,example01-02-1%%
3452

3453 3454
Part of the expression can be specified in curly brackets. The previous example can be written as follows:
%%example01-0{1,2}-1%%
3455

3456 3457 3458
Curly brackets can contain a range of numbers separated by two dots (non-negative integers). In this case, the range is expanded to a set of values that generate shard addresses. If the first number starts with zero, the values are formed with the same zero alignment.
The previous example can be written as follows:
%%example01-{01..02}-1%%
3459

3460
If you have multiple pairs of curly brackets, it generates the direct product of the corresponding sets.
3461

3462 3463
Addresses and fragments in curly brackets can be separated by the pipe (|) symbol. In this case, the corresponding sets of addresses are interpreted as replicas, and the query will be sent to the first healthy replica. The replicas are evaluated in the order currently set in the &#39;load_balancing&#39; setting.
Example:
3464

3465
%%example01-{01..02}-{1|2}%%
3466

3467
This example specifies two shards that each have two replicas.
3468

3469
The number of addresses generated is limited by a constant. Right now this is 1000 addresses.
3470

3471
Using the &#39;remote&#39; table function is less optimal than creating a Distributed table, because in this case, the server connection is re-established for every request. In addition, if host names are set, the names are resolved, and errors are not counted when working with various replicas. When processing a large number of queries, always create the Distributed table ahead of time, and don&#39;t use the &#39;remote&#39; table function.
3472

3473
The &#39;remote&#39; table function can be useful in the following cases:
3474 3475 3476
- Accessing a specific server for data comparison, debugging, and testing.
- Queries between various ClickHouse clusters for research purposes.
- Infrequent distributed requests that are made manually.
3477
- Distributed requests where the set of servers is re-defined each time.
3478

3479 3480
The username can be omitted. In this case, the &#39;default&#39; username is used.
The password can be omitted. In this case, an empty password is used.
3481 3482

</div>
3483
<div class="island">
3484 3485
<h1>Formats</h1>
</div>
3486
<div class="island content">
3487

3488
The format determines how data is given to you after SELECTs, and how it is accepted for INSERTs.
3489 3490


3491
==Native==
3492

3493
The most efficient format. Data is written and read by blocks in binary format. For each block, the number of rows, number of columns, column names and types, and parts of columns in this block are recorded one after another. In other words, this format is &quot;columnar&quot; - it doesn&#39;t convert columns to rows. This is the format used in the native interface for interaction between servers, for using the command-line client, and for C++ clients.
3494

3495
You can use this format to quickly generate dumps that can only be read by the ClickHouse DBMS. It doesn&#39;t make sense to work with this format yourself.
3496 3497


3498
==TabSeparated==
3499

3500
In TabSeparated format, data is written by row. Each row contains values separated by tabs. Each value is follow by a tab, except the last value in the row, which is followed by a line break. Strictly Unix line breaks are assumed everywhere. The last row also must contain a line break at the end. Values are written in text format, without enclosing quotation marks, and with special characters escaped.
3501

3502
Whole numbers are written in decimal form. Numbers may contain an extra &quot;+&quot; symbol at the beginning (but it is not recorded during a write). Non-negative numbers can&#39;t contain the negative sign. When reading, it is allowed to parse an empty string as a zero, or (for signed types) a string consisting of just a minus sign as a zero. Numbers that do not fit into the corresponding data type may be parsed as a different number, without an error message.
3503

3504
Floating-point numbers are written in decimal form. The dot is used as the decimal separator. Exponential entries are supported, as are &#39;inf&#39;, &#39;+inf&#39;, &#39;-inf&#39;, and &#39;nan&#39;. An entry of floating-point numbers may begin or end with a decimal point.
3505
For writes, accuracy may be lost on floating-point numbers.
3506
For reads, a result is not necessarily the nearest machine-representable number.
3507

3508
Data is written in YYYY-MM-DD format and read in the same format, but with any characters as separators.
3509 3510
Dates with times are written in the format YYYY-MM-DD hh:mm:ss and read in the same format, but with any characters as separators.
This all occurs in the system time zone at the time the client or server starts (depending on which one formats data). For dates with times, daylight saving time is not specified. So if a dump has times during daylight saving time, the dump does not unequivocally match the data, and a read will select one of the two times.
3511
During a read operation, incorrect dates and dates with times can be parsed with natural overflow or as null dates and times, without an error message.
3512

3513
As an exception, reading dates with times is also supported in Unix timestamp format, if it consists of exactly 10 decimal digits. However, the result is not time zone-dependent. The formats YYYY-MM-DD hh:mm:ss and NNNNNNNNNN are differentiated automatically.
3514

3515
Strings are written with backslash-escaped special characters. The following escape sequences are used: %%\b%%, %%\f%%, %%\r,%% %%\n%%, %%\t%%, %%\0%%, %%\&#39;%%, and %%\\%%. For a read, any sequences of the type <span class="inline-example">\<i>x</i></span> are also supported, where <i>x</i> is any character. These sequences are converted to <i>x</i>. This means that a read supports formats where a line break can be written as %%\n%% or as %%\%% and a line break. For example, the string &#39;Hello world&#39; with a line break between the words instead of a space can be retrieved in any of the following variations:
3516

3517
%%Hello\nworld%%
3518

3519 3520
%%Hello\
world%%
3521

3522
The second variant is supported because MySQL uses it when writing tab-separated dumps.
3523

3524
Only a small set of symbols are escaped. You can easily stumble onto a string value that your terminal will ruin in output.
3525

3526
Arrays are written as a list of comma-separated values in square brackets. Number items in the array are written as normally, but dates, dates with times, and strings are written in single quotes with the same escaping rules as above.
3527

3528
The TabSeparated format is convenient for processing data using custom programs and scripts. It is used by default in the HTTP interface, and in the command-line client&#39;s batch mode. This format also allows transferring data between different DBMSs. For example, you can get a dump from MySQL and upload it to ClickHouse, or vice versa.
3529

3530
The TabSeparated format supports outputting total values (when using WITH TOTALS) and extreme values (when &#39;extremes&#39; is set to 1). In these cases, the total values and extremes are output after the main data. The main result, total values, and extremes are separated from each other by an empty line. Example:
3531

3532
%%SELECT EventDate, count() AS c FROM test.hits GROUP BY EventDate WITH TOTALS ORDER BY EventDate FORMAT TabSeparated%%
3533

3534
%%
3535 3536 3537 3538 3539 3540 3541 3542 3543 3544 3545 3546
2014-03-17      1406958
2014-03-18      1383658
2014-03-19      1405797
2014-03-20      1353623
2014-03-21      1245779
2014-03-22      1031592
2014-03-23      1046491

0000-00-00      8873898

2014-03-17      1031592
2014-03-23      1406958
3547
%%
3548

3549
==TabSeparatedWithNames==
3550

3551 3552
Differs from the TabSeparated format in that the column names are written in the first row.
For a read, the first row is completely ignored. You can&#39;t use column names to determine their position or to check their correctness.
3553 3554


3555
==TabSeparatedWithNamesAndTypes==
3556

3557 3558
Differs from the TabSeparated format in that the column names are written to the first row, while the column types are in the second row.
For a read, the first and second rows are completely ignored.
3559 3560


3561
==TabSeparatedRaw==
3562

3563 3564
Differs from the TabSeparated format in that the rows are written without escaping.
This format is only appropriate for writing (outputting a query result), but not for reading (retrieving data to insert in a table).
3565 3566


3567
==BlockTabSeparated==
3568

3569
Data is not written by row, but by column and block.
3570 3571 3572 3573
Each block consists of parts of columns, each of which is written on a separate line.
The values are tab-separated. The last value in a column part is followed by a line break instead of a tab.
Blocks are separated by a double line break.
The rest of the rules are the same as in the TabSeparated format.
3574
This format is only appropriate for writes, not for reads.
3575 3576


3577
==RowBinary==
3578

3579 3580
Writes data by row in binary format. Rows and values are listed consecutively, without separators.
This format is less efficient than the Native format, since it is row-based.
3581 3582


3583
==Pretty==
3584

3585
Writes data as Unicode-art tables, also using ANSI-escape sequences for setting colors in the terminal.
3586 3587
A full grid of the table is drawn, and each row occupies two lines in the terminal. Each result block is output as a separate table. This is necessary so that blocks can be output without buffering results (buffering would be necessary in order to pre-calculate the visible width of all the values).
To avoid dumping too much data to the terminal, only the first 10,000 rows are printed. If the number of rows is greater than or equal to 10,000, the message &quot;Showed first 10,000&quot; is printed.
3588
This format is only appropriate for writes (outputting a query result), but not for reads.
3589

3590
The Pretty format supports outputting total values (when using WITH TOTALS) and extremes (when &#39;extremes&#39; is set to 1). In these cases, total values and extreme values are output after the main data, in separate tables. Example (shown for the PrettyCompact format):
3591

3592
%%SELECT EventDate, count() AS c FROM test.hits GROUP BY EventDate WITH TOTALS ORDER BY EventDate FORMAT PrettyCompact%%
3593

3594
%%
3595 3596 3597 3598 3599 3600 3601 3602 3603 3604 3605 3606 3607 3608 3609 3610 3611 3612 3613 3614
┌──EventDate─┬───────c─┐
│ 2014-03-17 │ 1406958 │
│ 2014-03-18 │ 1383658 │
│ 2014-03-19 │ 1405797 │
│ 2014-03-20 │ 1353623 │
│ 2014-03-21 │ 1245779 │
│ 2014-03-22 │ 1031592 │
│ 2014-03-23 │ 1046491 │
└────────────┴─────────┘

Totals:
┌──EventDate─┬───────c─┐
│ 0000-00-00 │ 8873898 │
└────────────┴─────────┘

Extremes:
┌──EventDate─┬───────c─┐
│ 2014-03-17 │ 1031592 │
│ 2014-03-23 │ 1406958 │
└────────────┴─────────┘
3615
%%
3616

3617
==PrettyCompact==
3618

3619
Differs from Pretty in that the grid is drawn between rows and the result is more compact. This format is used by default in the command-line client in interactive mode.
3620 3621


3622
==PrettyCompactMonoBlock==
3623

3624
Differs from PrettyCompact in that up to 10,000 rows are buffered, then output as a single table, not by blocks.
3625 3626


3627
==PrettySpace==
3628

3629
Differs from PrettyCompact in that whitespace (space characters) is used instead of the grid.
3630 3631


3632
==PrettyNoEscapes==
3633

3634 3635
Differs from Pretty in that ANSI-escape sequences aren&#39;t used. This is necessary for displaying this format in a browser, as well as for using the &#39;watch&#39; command-line utility.
Example:
3636

3637
%%watch -n1 &quot;clickhouse-client --query=&#39;SELECT * FROM system.events FORMAT PrettyCompactNoEscapes&#39;&quot;%%
3638

3639
You can use the HTTP interface for displaying in the browser.
3640 3641


3642
==PrettyCompactNoEscapes==
3643

3644
The same.
3645 3646


3647
==PrettySpaceNoEscapes==
3648

3649
The same.
3650 3651


3652
==Vertical==
3653

3654 3655
Prints each value on a separate line with the column name specified. This format is convenient for printing just one or a few rows, if each row consists of a large number of columns.
This format is only appropriate for writes, not for reads.
3656 3657


3658
==Values==
3659

3660
Prints every row in brackets. Rows are separated by commas. There is no comma after the last row. The values inside the brackets are also comma-separated. Numbers are output in decimal format without quotes. Arrays are output in square brackets. Strings, dates, and dates with times are output in quotes. Escaping rules and parsing are similar to the TabSeparated format. During formatting, extra spaces aren&#39;t inserted, but during parsing, they are allowed and skipped (except for spaces inside array values, which are not allowed).
3661

3662 3663
This is the format that is used in INSERT INTO t VALUES ...
But you can also use it for output.
3664 3665


3666
==JSON==
3667

3668
Outputs data in JSON format. Besides data tables, it also outputs column names and types, along with some additional information - the total number of output rows, and the number of rows that could have been output if there weren&#39;t a LIMIT. Example:
3669

3670
%%SELECT SearchPhrase, count() AS c FROM test.hits GROUP BY SearchPhrase WITH TOTALS ORDER BY c DESC LIMIT 5 FORMAT JSON%%
3671

3672
%%
3673 3674 3675 3676 3677 3678 3679 3680 3681 3682 3683 3684 3685 3686 3687 3688 3689 3690 3691 3692 3693 3694 3695 3696 3697 3698 3699 3700 3701 3702 3703 3704 3705 3706 3707 3708 3709 3710 3711 3712 3713 3714 3715 3716 3717 3718 3719 3720 3721 3722 3723 3724 3725 3726 3727 3728 3729 3730 3731 3732 3733
{
        &quot;meta&quot;:
        [
                {
                        &quot;name&quot;: &quot;SearchPhrase&quot;,
                        &quot;type&quot;: &quot;String&quot;
                },
                {
                        &quot;name&quot;: &quot;c&quot;,
                        &quot;type&quot;: &quot;UInt64&quot;
                }
        ],

        &quot;data&quot;:
        [
                {
                        &quot;SearchPhrase&quot;: &quot;&quot;,
                        &quot;c&quot;: &quot;8267016&quot;
                },
                {
                        &quot;SearchPhrase&quot;: &quot;bath interiors&quot;,
                        &quot;c&quot;: &quot;2166&quot;
                },
                {
                        &quot;SearchPhrase&quot;: &quot;yandex&quot;,
                        &quot;c&quot;: &quot;1655&quot;
                },
                {
                        &quot;SearchPhrase&quot;: &quot;spring 2014 fashion&quot;,
                        &quot;c&quot;: &quot;1549&quot;
                },
                {
                        &quot;SearchPhrase&quot;: &quot;freeform photo&quot;,
                        &quot;c&quot;: &quot;1480&quot;
                }
        ],

        &quot;totals&quot;:
        {
                &quot;SearchPhrase&quot;: &quot;&quot;,
                &quot;c&quot;: &quot;8873898&quot;
        },

        &quot;extremes&quot;:
        {
                &quot;min&quot;:
                {
                        &quot;SearchPhrase&quot;: &quot;&quot;,
                        &quot;c&quot;: &quot;1480&quot;
                },
                &quot;max&quot;:
                {
                        &quot;SearchPhrase&quot;: &quot;&quot;,
                        &quot;c&quot;: &quot;8267016&quot;
                }
        },

        &quot;rows&quot;: 5,

        &quot;rows_before_limit_at_least&quot;: 141137
}
3734
%%
3735

3736
JSON is compatible with JavaScript. For this purpose, certain symbols are additionally escaped: the forward slash %%/%% is escaped as %%\/%%; alternative line breaks %%U+2028%% and %%U+2029%%, which don&#39;t work in some browsers, are escaped as <span class="inline-example">\u<i>XXXX</i></span>-sequences. ASCII control characters are escaped: backspace, form feed, line feed, carriage return, and horizontal tab as %%\b%%, %%\f%%, %%\n%%, %%\r%%, and %%\t%% respectively, along with the rest of the bytes from the range 00-1F using <span class="inline-example">\u<i>XXXX</i></span>-sequences. Invalid UTF-8 sequences are changed to the replacement character %%�%% and, thus, the output text will consist of valid UTF-8 sequences. UInt64 and Int64 numbers are output in double quotes for compatibility with JavaScript.
3737

3738 3739 3740
%%rows%% - The total number of output rows.
%%rows_before_limit_at_least%% - The minimal number of rows there would have been without a LIMIT. Output only if the query contains LIMIT.
If the query contains GROUP BY, %%rows_before_limit_at_least%% is the exact number of rows there would have been without a LIMIT.
3741

3742 3743
%%totals%% - Total values (when using %%WITH TOTALS%%).
%%extremes%% - Extreme values (when %%extremes%% is set to 1).
3744 3745


3746
This format is only appropriate for writes, not for reads.
3747 3748


3749
==JSONCompact==
3750

3751 3752 3753
Differs from JSON only in that data rows are output in arrays, not in objects. Example:

%%
3754 3755 3756 3757 3758 3759 3760 3761 3762 3763 3764 3765 3766 3767 3768 3769 3770 3771 3772 3773 3774 3775 3776 3777 3778 3779 3780 3781 3782 3783 3784 3785 3786 3787
{
        &quot;meta&quot;:
        [
                {
                        &quot;name&quot;: &quot;SearchPhrase&quot;,
                        &quot;type&quot;: &quot;String&quot;
                },
                {
                        &quot;name&quot;: &quot;c&quot;,
                        &quot;type&quot;: &quot;UInt64&quot;
                }
        ],

        &quot;data&quot;:
        [
                [&quot;&quot;, &quot;8267016&quot;],
                [&quot;bath interiors&quot;, &quot;2166&quot;],
                [&quot;yandex&quot;, &quot;1655&quot;],
                [&quot;spring 2014 fashion&quot;, &quot;1549&quot;],
                [&quot;freeform photo&quot;, &quot;1480&quot;]
        ],

        &quot;totals&quot;: [&quot;&quot;,&quot;8873898&quot;],

        &quot;extremes&quot;:
        {
                &quot;min&quot;: [&quot;&quot;,&quot;1480&quot;],
                &quot;max&quot;: [&quot;&quot;,&quot;8267016&quot;]
        },

        &quot;rows&quot;: 5,

        &quot;rows_before_limit_at_least&quot;: 141137
}
3788
%%
3789 3790


3791
==Null==
3792

3793
Nothing is output. However, the query is processed, and when using the command-line client, data is transmitted to the client. This is used for tests, including productivity testing. Obviously, this format is only appropriate for writes, not for reads.
3794 3795

</div>
3796
<div class="island">
3797 3798
<h1>Data types</h1>
</div>
3799
<div class="island content">
3800

3801
==UInt8, UInt16, UInt32, UInt64, Int8, Int16, Int32, Int64==
3802

3803
Fixed-length integers, with or without a sign.
3804 3805


3806
==Float32, Float64==
3807

3808
Floating-point numbers are just like &#39;float&#39; and &#39;double&#39; in the C language.
3809 3810
In contrast to standard SQL, floating-point numbers support &#39;inf&#39;, &#39;-inf&#39;, and even &#39;nan&#39;s.
See the notes on sorting nans in &quot;ORDER BY clause&quot;.
3811
We do not recommend storing floating-point numbers in tables.
3812 3813


3814
==String==
3815

3816 3817
Strings of an arbitrary length. The length is not limited. The value can contain an arbitrary set of bytes, including null bytes.
The String type replaces the types VARCHAR, BLOB, CLOB, and others from other DBMSs.
3818

3819
===Encodings===
3820

3821
ClickHouse doesn&#39;t have the concept of encodings. Strings can contain an arbitrary set of bytes, which are stored and output as-is.
3822 3823
If you need to store texts, we recommend using UTF-8 encoding. At the very least, if your terminal uses UTF-8 (as recommended), you can read and write your values without making conversions.
Similarly, certain functions for working with strings have separate variations that work under the assumption that the string contains a set of bytes representing a UTF-8 encoded text.
3824
For example, the &#39;length&#39; function calculates the string length in bytes, while the &#39;lengthUTF8&#39; function calculates the string length in Unicode code points, assuming that the value is UTF-8 encoded.
3825 3826


3827
==FixedString(N)==
3828

3829
A fixed-length string of N bytes (not characters or code points). N must be a strictly positive natural number.
3830 3831 3832
When reading a string that contains fewer bytes, the string is padded to N bytes by appending null bytes at the right.
When reading a string that contains more bytes, an error message is returned.
When writing a string, null bytes are not trimmed off of the end of the string, but are output.
3833
Note that this behavior differs from MySQL behavior for the CHAR type (where strings are padded with spaces, and the spaces are removed for output).
3834

3835
Fewer functions can work with the FixedString(N) type than with String, so it is less convenient to use.
3836 3837


3838
==Date==
3839

3840 3841
A date. Stored in two bytes as the number of days since 1970-01-01 (unsigned). Allows storing values from just after the beginning of the Unix Epoch to the upper threshold defined by a constant at the compilation stage (currently, this is until the year 2038, but it may be expanded to 2106).
The minimum value is output as 0000-00-00.
3842

3843
The date is stored without the time zone.
3844 3845


3846
==DateTime==
3847

3848
Date with time. Stored in four bytes as a Unix timestamp (unsigned). Allows storing values in the same range as for the Date type. The minimal value is output as 0000-00-00 00:00:00. The time is stored with accuracy up to one second (without leap seconds).
3849

3850
===Time zones===
3851

3852
The date with time is converted from text (divided into component parts) to binary and back, using the system&#39;s time zone at the time the client or server starts. In text format, information about daylight savings is lost.
3853

3854
Supports only those time zones that never had the time differ from UTC for a partial number of hours (without leap seconds) over the entire time range you will be working with.
3855

3856
So when working with a textual date (for example, when saving text dumps), keep in mind that there may be ambiguity during changes for daylight savings time, and there may be problems matching data if the time zone changed.
3857

W
William Shallum 已提交
3858 3859 3860 3861 3862 3863 3864 3865 3866 3867 3868 3869 3870 3871 3872 3873 3874 3875 3876 3877 3878 3879 3880 3881 3882
==Enum==

Enum8 or Enum16. A set of enumerated string values that are stored as Int8 or Int16. Example:

%%Enum8('hello' = 1, 'world' = 2)%%
- This data type has two possible values - 'hello' and 'world'.

The numeric values must be within -128..127 for %%Enum8%% and -32768..32767 for %%Enum16%%. Every member of the enum must also have different numbers. The empty string is a valid value. The numbers do not need to be sequential and can be in any order. The order does not matter.

In memory, the data is stored in the same way as the numeric types %%Int8%% and %%Int16%%.
When reading in text format, the string is read and the corresponding numeric value is looked up. An exception will be thrown if it is not found.
When writing in text format, the stored number is looked up and the corresponding string is written out. An exception will be thrown if the number does not correspond to a known value.
In binary format, the information is saved in the same way as %%Int8%% and %%Int16%%.
The implicit default value for an Enum is the value having the smallest numeric value.

In %%ORDER BY%%, %%GROUP BY%%, %%IN%%, %%DISTINCT%%, etc. Enums behave like the numeric value. e.g. they will be sorted by the numeric value in an %%ORDER BY%%. Equality and comparison operators behave like they do on the underlying numeric value.

Enum values cannot be compared to numbers, they must be compared to a string. If the string compared to is not a valid value for the Enum, an exception will be thrown. The %%IN%% operator is supported with the Enum on the left hand side and a set of strings on the right hand side.

Most numeric and string operations are not defined for Enum values, e.g. adding a number to an Enum or concatenating a string to an Enum. However, the %%toString%% function can be used to convert the Enum to its string value. Enum values are also convertible to numeric types using the %%to<i>T</i>%% function where <i>T</i> is a numeric type. When T corresponds to the enum's underlying numeric type, this conversion is zero-cost.

It is possible to add new members to the Enum using ALTER. If the only change is to the set of values, the operation will be almost instant. It is also possible to remove members of the Enum using ALTER. Removing members is only safe if the removed value has never been used in the table. As a safeguard, changing the numeric value of a previously defined Enum member will throw an exception.

Using ALTER, it is possible to change an %%Enum8%% to an %%Enum16%% or vice versa - just like changing an %%Int8%% to %%Int16%%.

3883

3884
==Array(T)==
3885

3886 3887
Array of T-type items. The T type can be any type, including an array.
We don&#39;t recommend using multidimensional arrays, because they are not well supported (for example, you can&#39;t store multidimensional arrays in any tables except Memory tables).
3888 3889


3890
==Tuple(T1, T2, ...)==
3891

3892
Tuples can&#39;t be written to tables (other than Memory tables). They are used for temporary column grouping. Columns can be grouped when an IN expression is used in a query, and for specifying certain formal parameters of lambda functions. For more information, see &quot;IN operators&quot; and &quot;Higher order functions&quot;.
3893

3894
Tuples can be output as the result of running a query. In this case, for text formats other than JSON*, values are comma-separated in brackets. In JSON* formats, tuples are output as arrays (in square brackets).
3895 3896


3897
==Nested data structures==
3898

3899
==Nested(Name1 Type1, Name2 Type2, ...)==
3900

3901
A nested data structure is like a nested table. The parameters of a nested data structure - the column names and types - are specified the same way as in a CREATE query. Each table row can correspond to any number of rows in a nested data structure.
3902

3903
Example:
3904

3905
%%
3906 3907 3908 3909 3910 3911 3912 3913 3914 3915 3916 3917 3918 3919 3920 3921 3922 3923 3924 3925
CREATE TABLE test.visits
(
    CounterID UInt32,
    StartDate Date,
    Sign Int8,
    IsNew UInt8,
    VisitID UInt64,
    UserID UInt64,
    ...
    Goals Nested
    (
        ID UInt32,
        Serial UInt32,
        EventTime DateTime,
        Price Int64,
        OrderID String,
        CurrencyID UInt32
    ),
    ...
) ENGINE = CollapsingMergeTree(StartDate, intHash32(UserID), (CounterID, StartDate, intHash32(UserID), VisitID), 8192, Sign)
3926
%%
3927

3928
This example declares the &#39;Goals&#39; nested data structure, which contains data about conversions (goals reached). Each row in the &#39;visits&#39; table can correspond to zero or any number of conversions.
3929

3930
Only a single nesting level is supported.
3931

3932
In most cases, when working with a nested data structure, its individual columns are specified. To do this, the column names are separated by a dot. These columns make up an array of matching types. All the column arrays of a single nested data structure have the same length.
3933

3934
Example:
3935

3936
%%
3937 3938 3939 3940 3941 3942 3943 3944 3945 3946 3947 3948 3949 3950 3951 3952 3953 3954 3955
SELECT
    Goals.ID,
    Goals.EventTime
FROM test.visits
WHERE CounterID = 101500 AND length(Goals.ID) &lt; 5
LIMIT 10

┌─Goals.ID───────────────────────┬─Goals.EventTime───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ [1073752,591325,591325]        │ [&#39;2014-03-17 16:38:10&#39;,&#39;2014-03-17 16:38:48&#39;,&#39;2014-03-17 16:42:27&#39;]                       │
│ [1073752]                      │ [&#39;2014-03-17 00:28:25&#39;]                                                                   │
│ [1073752]                      │ [&#39;2014-03-17 10:46:20&#39;]                                                                   │
│ [1073752,591325,591325,591325] │ [&#39;2014-03-17 13:59:20&#39;,&#39;2014-03-17 22:17:55&#39;,&#39;2014-03-17 22:18:07&#39;,&#39;2014-03-17 22:18:51&#39;] │
│ []                             │ []                                                                                        │
│ [1073752,591325,591325]        │ [&#39;2014-03-17 11:37:06&#39;,&#39;2014-03-17 14:07:47&#39;,&#39;2014-03-17 14:36:21&#39;]                       │
│ []                             │ []                                                                                        │
│ []                             │ []                                                                                        │
│ [591325,1073752]               │ [&#39;2014-03-17 00:46:05&#39;,&#39;2014-03-17 00:46:05&#39;]                                             │
│ [1073752,591325,591325,591325] │ [&#39;2014-03-17 13:28:33&#39;,&#39;2014-03-17 13:30:26&#39;,&#39;2014-03-17 18:51:21&#39;,&#39;2014-03-17 18:51:45&#39;] │
└────────────────────────────────┴───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
3956
%%
3957

3958
It is easiest to think of a nested data structure as a set of multiple column arrays of the same length.
3959

3960
The only place where a SELECT query can specify the name of an entire nested data structure instead of individual columns is the ARRAY JOIN clause. For more information, see &quot;ARRAY JOIN clause&quot;. Example:
3961

3962
%%
3963 3964 3965 3966 3967 3968 3969 3970 3971 3972 3973 3974 3975 3976 3977 3978 3979 3980 3981 3982
SELECT
    Goal.ID,
    Goal.EventTime
FROM test.visits
ARRAY JOIN Goals AS Goal
WHERE CounterID = 101500 AND length(Goals.ID) &lt; 5
LIMIT 10

┌─Goal.ID─┬──────Goal.EventTime─┐
│ 1073752 │ 2014-03-17 16:38:10 │
│  591325 │ 2014-03-17 16:38:48 │
│  591325 │ 2014-03-17 16:42:27 │
│ 1073752 │ 2014-03-17 00:28:25 │
│ 1073752 │ 2014-03-17 10:46:20 │
│ 1073752 │ 2014-03-17 13:59:20 │
│  591325 │ 2014-03-17 22:17:55 │
│  591325 │ 2014-03-17 22:18:07 │
│  591325 │ 2014-03-17 22:18:51 │
│ 1073752 │ 2014-03-17 11:37:06 │
└─────────┴─────────────────────┘
3983
%%
3984

3985
You can&#39;t perform SELECT for an entire nested data structure. You can only explicitly list individual columns that are part of it.
3986

3987
For an INSERT query, you should pass all the component column arrays of a nested data structure separately (as if they were individual column arrays). During insertion, the system checks that they have the same length.
3988

3989
For a DESCRIBE query, the columns in a nested data structure are listed separately in the same way.
3990

3991
The ALTER query is very limited for elements in a nested data structure.
3992 3993


3994
==AggregateFunction(name, types_of_arguments...)==
3995

3996
The intermediate state of an aggregate function. To get it, use aggregate functions with the &#39;-State&#39; suffix. For more information, see &quot;AggregatingMergeTree&quot;.
3997 3998


3999
==Special data types==
4000

4001
Special data type values can&#39;t be saved to a table or output in results, but are used as the intermediate result of running a query.
4002

4003
===Set===
4004

4005
Used for the right half of an IN expression.
4006

4007
===Expression===
4008

4009
Used for representing lambda expressions in high-order functions.
4010 4011


4012
==Boolean values==
4013

4014
There isn&#39;t a separate type for boolean values. They use the UInt8 type, restricted to the values 0 or 1.
4015 4016

</div>
4017
<div class="island">
4018 4019
<h1>Operators</h1>
</div>
4020
<div class="island content">
4021

4022
All operators are transformed to the corresponding functions at the query parsing stage, in accordance with their precedence and associativity.
4023

4024
==Access operators==
4025

4026 4027
%%a[N]%% - Access to an array element, arrayElement(a, N) function.
%%a.N%% - Access to a tuple element, tupleElement(a, N) function.
4028

4029
==Numeric negation operator==
4030

4031
%%-a%% - negate(a) function
4032

4033
==Multiplication and division operators==
4034

4035 4036 4037
%%a * b%% - multiply(a, b) function
%%a / b%% - divide(a, b) function
%%a % b%% - modulo(a, b) function
4038

4039
==Addition and subtraction operators==
4040

4041 4042
%%a + b%% - plus(a, b) function
%%a - b%% - minus(a, b) function
4043

4044
==Comparison operators==
4045

4046 4047 4048
%%a = b%% - equals(a, b) function
%%a == b%% - equals(a, b) function
%%a != b%% - notEquals(a, b) function
4049
<span class="inline-example">a &lt;> b</span> - notEquals(a, b) function
4050
%%a &lt;= b%% - lessOrEquals(a, b) function
4051
<span class="inline-example">a >= b</span> - greaterOrEquals(a, b) function
4052
%%a &lt; b%% - less(a, b) function
4053
<span class="inline-example">a > b</span> - greater(a, b) function
4054 4055
%%a LIKE s%% - like(a, b) function
%%a NOT LIKE s%% - notLike(a, b) function
4056

4057
==Operators for working with data sets==
4058

4059
See the section &quot;IN operators&quot;.
4060

4061 4062 4063 4064
%%a IN ...%% - in(a, b) function
%%a NOT IN ...%% - notIn(a, b) function
%%a GLOBAL IN ...%% - globalIn(a, b) function
%%a GLOBAL NOT IN ...%% - globalNotIn(a, b) function
4065

4066
==Logical negation operator==
4067

4068
%%NOT a%% - not(a) function
4069

4070
==Logical &quot;AND&quot; operator==
4071

4072
%%a AND b%% - and(a, b) function
4073

4074
==Logical &quot;OR&quot; operator==
4075

4076
%%a OR b%% - or(a, b) function
4077

4078
==Conditional operator==
4079

4080
%%a ? b : c%% - if(a, b, c) function
4081

4082
==Lambda creation operator==
4083

4084
<span class="inline-example">x -> expr</span> - lambda(x, expr) function
4085

4086
The following operators do not have a priority, since they are brackets:
4087

4088
==Array creation operator==
4089

4090
%%[x1, ...]%% - array(x1, ...) function
4091

4092
==Tuple creation operator==
4093

4094
%%(x1, x2, ...)%% - tuple(x2, x2, ...) function
4095 4096


4097
==Associativity==
4098

4099 4100
All binary operators have left associativity. For example, &#39;1 + 2 + 3&#39; is transformed to &#39;plus(plus(1, 2), 3)&#39;.
Sometimes this doesn&#39;t work the way you expect. For example, &#39;SELECT 4 > 3 > 2&#39; results in 0.
4101

4102
For efficiency, the &#39;and&#39; and &#39;or&#39; functions accept any number of arguments. The corresponding chains of AND and OR operators are transformed to a single call of these functions.
4103 4104

</div>
4105
<div class="island">
4106 4107
<h1>Functions</h1>
</div>
4108
<div class="island content">
4109

4110
There are at least* two types of functions - regular functions (they are just called &quot;functions&quot;) and aggregate functions. These are completely different concepts. Regular functions work as if they are applied to each row separately (for each row, the result of the function doesn&#39;t depend on the other rows). Aggregate functions accumulate a set of values from various rows (i.e. they depend on the entire set of rows).
4111

4112 4113
In this section we discuss regular functions. For aggregate functions, see the section &quot;Aggregate functions&quot;.
* - There is a third type of function that the &#39;arrayJoin&#39; function belongs to; table functions can also be mentioned separately.
4114

4115
===Strong typing===
4116

4117
In contrast to standard SQL, ClickHouse has strong typing. In other words, it doesn&#39;t make implicit conversions between types. Each function works for a specific set of types. This means that sometimes you need to use type conversion functions.
4118

4119
===Сommon subexpression elimination===
4120

4121
All expressions in a query that have the same AST (the same record or same result of syntactic parsing) are considered to have identical values. Such expressions are concatenated and executed once. Identical subqueries are also eliminated this way.
4122

4123
===Types of results===
4124

4125
All functions return a single return as the result (not several values, and not zero values). The type of result is usually defined only by the types of arguments, not by the values. Exceptions are the tupleElement function (the a.N operator), and the toFixedString function.
4126

4127
===Constants===
4128

4129
For simplicity, certain functions can only work with constants for some arguments. For example, the right argument of the LIKE operator must be a constant.
4130 4131
Almost all functions return a constant for constant arguments. The exception is functions that generate random numbers.
The &#39;now&#39; function returns different values for queries that were run at different times, but the result is considered a constant, since constancy is only important within a single query.
4132
A constant expression is also considered a constant (for example, the right half of the LIKE operator can be constructed from multiple constants).
4133

4134
Functions can be implemented in different ways for constant and non-constant arguments (different code is executed). But the results for a constant and for a true column containing only the same value should match each other.
4135

4136
===Immutability===
4137

4138
Functions can&#39;t change the values of their arguments - any changes are returned as the result. Thus, the result of calculating separate functions does not depend on the order in which the functions are written in the query.
4139

4140
===Error handling===
4141

4142
Some functions might throw an exception if the data is invalid. In this case, the query is canceled and an error text is returned to the client. For distributed processing, when an exception occurs on one of the servers, the other servers also attempt to abort the query.
4143

4144
===Evaluation of argument expressions===
4145

4146 4147
In almost all programming languages, one of the arguments might not be evaluated for certain operators. This is usually for the operators &amp;&amp;, ||, ?:.
But in ClickHouse, arguments of functions (operators) are always evaluated. This is because entire parts of columns are evaluated at once, instead of calculating each row separately.
4148

4149
===Performing functions for distributed query processing===
4150

4151
For distributed query processing, as many stages of query processing as possible are performed on remote servers, and the rest of the stages (merging intermediate results and everything after that) are performed on the requestor server.
4152

4153
This means that functions can be performed on different servers.
4154
For example, in the query <span class="inline-example">SELECT <b>f</b>(sum(<b>g</b>(x))) FROM distributed_table GROUP BY <b>h</b>(y)</span>,
4155 4156
- if %%distributed_table%% has at least two shards, the functions %%g%% and %%h%% are performed on remote servers, and the function %%f%% - is performed on the requestor server.
- if %%distributed_table%% has only one shard, all the functions %%f%%, %%g%%, and %%h%% are performed on this shard&#39;s server.
4157

4158
The result of a function usually doesn&#39;t depend on which server it is performed on. However, sometimes this is important.
4159
For example, functions that work with dictionaries use the dictionary that exists on the server they are running on.
4160
Another example is the %%hostName%% function, which returns the name of the server it is running on in order to make GROUP BY by servers in a SELECT query.
4161

4162
If a function in a query is performed on the requestor server, but you need to perform it on remote servers, you can wrap it in an &#39;any&#39; aggregate function or add it to a key in GROUP BY.
4163 4164


4165
==Arithmetic functions==
4166

4167
For all arithmetic functions, the result type is calculated as the smallest number type that the result fits in, if there is such a type. The minimum is taken simultaneously based on the number of bits, whether it is signed, and whether it floats. If there are not enough bits, the highest bit type is taken.
4168

4169
Example:
4170

4171
<pre class="terminal">
4172 4173
:) SELECT toTypeName(0), toTypeName(0 + 0), toTypeName(0 + 0 + 0), toTypeName(0 + 0 + 0 + 0)

4174
┌─<i class="c15">toTypeName(0)</i>─┬─<i class="c15">toTypeName(plus(0, 0))</i>─┬─<i class="c15">toTypeName(plus(plus(0, 0), 0))</i>─┬─<i class="c15">toTypeName(plus(plus(plus(0, 0), 0), 0))</i>─┐
4175 4176 4177 4178
│ UInt8         │ UInt16                 │ UInt32                          │ UInt64                                   │
└───────────────┴────────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────────┴──────────────────────────────────────────┘
</pre>

4179
Arithmetic functions work for any pair of types from UInt8, UInt16, UInt32, UInt64, Int8, Int16, Int32, Int64, Float32, or Float64.
4180

4181
Overflow is produced the same way as in C++.
4182 4183


4184
===plus(a, b), a + b operator===
4185

4186
Calculates the sum of the numbers.
4187

4188
You can also add whole numbers with a date or date and time. In the case of a date, adding a whole number means adding the corresponding number of days. For a date with time, it means adding the corresponding number of seconds.
4189

4190
===minus(a, b), a - b operator===
4191

4192
Calculates the difference. The result is always signed.
4193

4194
You can also calculate whole numbers from a date or date with time. The idea is the same - see above for &#39;plus&#39;.
4195

4196
===multiply(a, b), a * b operator===
4197

4198
Calculates the product of the numbers.
4199

4200
===divide(a, b), a / b operator===
4201

4202
Calculates the quotient of the numbers. The result type is always a floating-point type.
4203
It is not integer division. For integer division, use the &#39;intDiv&#39; function.
4204
When dividing by zero you get &#39;inf&#39;, &#39;-inf&#39;, or &#39;nan&#39;.
4205

4206
===intDiv(a, b)===
4207

4208 4209
Calculates the quotient of the numbers. Divides into integers, rounding down (by the absolute value).
When dividing by zero or when dividing a minimal negative number by minus one, an exception is thrown.
4210

4211
===intDivOrZero(a, b)===
4212

4213
Differs from &#39;intDiv&#39; in that it returns zero when dividing by zero or when dividing a minimal negative number by minus one.
4214

4215
===modulo(a, b), a % b operator===
4216

4217
Calculates the remainder after division.
4218
If arguments are floating-point numbers, they are pre-converted to integers by dropping the decimal portion. The remainder is taken in the same sense as in C++. Truncated division is used for negative numbers.
4219
An exception is thrown when dividing by zero or when dividing a minimal negative number by minus one.
4220

4221
===negate(a), -a operator===
4222

4223
Calculates a number with the reverse sign. The result is always signed.
4224

4225
===abs(a)===
4226

4227 4228
Calculates the absolute value of the number &#39;a&#39;. That is, if a&lt; 0, it returns -a.
For unsigned types, it doesn&#39;t do anything. For signed integer types, it returns an unsigned number.
4229

4230
==Bit functions==
4231

4232
Bit functions work for any pair of types from UInt8, UInt16, UInt32, UInt64, Int8, Int16, Int32, Int64, Float32, or Float64.
4233

4234
The result type is an integer with bits equal to the maximum bits of its arguments. If at least one of the arguments is signed, the result is a signed number. If an argument is a floating-point number, it is cast to Int64.
4235

4236
===bitAnd(a, b)===
4237

4238
===bitOr(a, b)===
4239

4240
===bitXor(a, b)===
4241

4242
===bitNot(a)===
4243

4244
===bitShiftLeft(a, b)===
4245

4246
===bitShiftRight(a, b)===
4247 4248


4249
==Comparison functions==
4250

4251
Comparison functions always return 0 or 1 (Uint8).
4252

4253
The following types can be compared:
4254 4255 4256 4257
- numbers
- strings and fixed strings
- dates
- dates with times
4258
within each group, but not between different groups.
4259

4260
For example, you can&#39;t compare a date with a string. You have to use a function to convert the string to a date, or vice versa.
4261

4262
Strings are compared by bytes. A shorter string is smaller than all strings that start with it and that contain at least one more character.
4263

4264
Signed and unsigned numbers are compared the same way as in C++. That is, you can get an incorrect result in some cases. Example: SELECT 9223372036854775807 > -1
4265 4266


4267
===equals, a = b and a == b operator===
4268 4269 4270

<h3>notEquals, a != b and a &lt;> b operator</h3>

4271
===less, &lt; operator===
4272 4273 4274

<h3>greater, > operator</h3>

4275
===lessOrEquals, &lt;= operator===
4276 4277 4278 4279

<h3>greaterOrEquals, >= operator</h3>


4280
==Logical functions==
4281

4282
Logical functions accept any numeric types, but return a UInt8 number equal to 0 or 1.
4283

4284
Zero as an argument is considered &quot;false,&quot; while any non-zero value is considered &quot;true&quot;.
4285 4286


4287
===and, AND operator===
4288

4289
===or, OR operator===
4290

4291
===not, NOT operator===
4292

4293
===xor===
4294 4295


4296
==Type conversion functions==
4297

4298 4299 4300 4301 4302
===toUInt8, toUInt16, toUInt32, toUInt64===
===toInt8, toInt16, toInt32, toInt64===
===toFloat32, toFloat64===
===toDate, toDateTime===
===toString===
4303

4304
Functions for converting between numbers, strings (but not fixed strings), dates, and dates with times. All these functions accept one argument.
4305

4306
When converting to or from a string, the value is formatted or parsed using the same rules as for the TabSeparated format (and almost all other text formats). If the string can&#39;t be parsed, an exception is thrown and the request is canceled.
4307

4308 4309
When converting dates to numbers or vice versa, the date corresponds to the number of days since the beginning of the Unix epoch.
When converting dates with times to numbers or vice versa, the date with time corresponds to the number of seconds since the beginning of the Unix epoch.
4310

4311 4312 4313 4314 4315 4316
Formats of date and date with time for toDate/toDateTime functions are defined as follows:
%%
YYYY-MM-DD
YYYY-MM-DD hh:mm:ss
%%

4317
As an exception, if converting from UInt32, Int32, UInt64, or Int64 type numbers to Date, and if the number is greater than or equal to 65536, the number is interpreted as a Unix timestamp (and not as the number of days) and is rounded to the date. This allows support for the common occurrence of writing &#39;toDate(unix_timestamp)&#39;, which otherwise would be an error and would require writing the more cumbersome &#39;toDate(toDateTime(unix_timestamp))&#39;.
4318

4319
Conversion between a date and date with time is performed the natural way: by adding a null time or dropping the time.
4320

4321
Conversion between numeric types uses the same rules as assignments between different numeric types in C++.
4322

4323
===toFixedString(s, N)===
4324

4325
Converts a String type argument to a FixedString(N) type (a string with fixed length N). N must be a constant. If the string has fewer bytes than N, it is passed with null bytes to the right. If the string has more bytes than N, an exception is thrown.
4326

4327
===toStringCutToZero(s)===
4328

4329
Accepts a String or FixedString argument. Returns a String and removes the null bytes from the end of the string.
4330

4331 4332 4333 4334
===reinterpretAsUInt8, reinterpretAsUInt16, reinterpretAsUInt32, reinterpretAsUInt64===
===reinterpretAsInt8, reinterpretAsInt16, reinterpretAsInt32, reinterpretAsInt64===
===reinterpretAsFloat32, reinterpretAsFloat64===
===reinterpretAsDate, reinterpretAsDateTime===
4335

4336
These functions accept a string and interpret the bytes placed at the beginning of the string as a number in host order (little endian). If the string isn&#39;t long enough, the functions work as if the string is padded with the necessary number of null bytes. If the string is longer than needed, the extra bytes are ignored. A date is interpreted as the number of days since the beginning of the Unix Epoch, and a date with time is interpreted as the number of seconds since the beginning of the Unix Epoch.
4337

4338
===reinterpretAsString===
4339

4340
This function accepts a number or date or date with time, and returns a string containing bytes representing the corresponding value in host order (little endian). Null bytes are dropped from the end. For example, a UInt32 type value of 255 is a string that is one byte long.
4341 4342


4343
==Functions for working with dates and times==
4344

4345 4346
===toYear===
- Converts a date or date with time to a UInt16 number containing the year number (AD).
4347

4348 4349
===toMonth===
- Converts a date or date with time to a UInt8 number containing the month number (1-12).
4350

4351 4352
===toDayOfMonth===
- Converts a date or date with time to a UInt8 number containing the number of the day of the month (1-31).
4353

4354 4355
===toDayOfWeek===
- Converts a date or date with time to a UInt8 number containing the number of the day of the week (Monday is 1, and Sunday is 7).
4356

4357 4358 4359
===toHour===
- Converts a date with time to a UInt8 number containing the number of the hour in 24-hour time (0-23).
This function assumes that if clocks are moved ahead, it is by one hour and occurs at 2 a.m., and if clocks are moved back, it is by one hour and occurs at 3 a.m. (which is not always true - even in Moscow the clocks were once changed at a different time).
4360

4361 4362
===toMinute===
- Converts a date with time to a UInt8 number containing the number of the minute of the hour (0-59).
4363

4364 4365 4366
===toSecond===
- Converts a date with time to a UInt8 number containing the number of the second in the minute (0-59).
Leap seconds are not accounted for.
4367

4368 4369 4370
===toMonday===
- Rounds down a date or date with time to the nearest Monday.
Returns the date.
4371

4372 4373 4374
===toStartOfMonth===
- Rounds down a date or date with time to the first day of the month.
Returns the date.
4375

4376 4377 4378
===toStartOfQuarter===
- Rounds down a date or date with time to the first day of the quarter.
The first day of the quarter is either 1 January, 1 April, 1 July, or 1 October. Returns the date.
4379

4380 4381 4382
===toStartOfYear===
- Rounds down a date or date with time to the first day of the year.
Returns the date.
4383

4384 4385
===toStartOfMinute===
- Rounds down a date with time to the start of the minute.
4386

4387 4388
===toStartOfHour===
- Rounds down a date with time to the start of the hour.
4389

4390 4391
===toTime===
- Converts a date with time to the date of the start of the Unix Epoch, while preserving the time.
4392

4393 4394
===toRelativeYearNum===
- Converts a date with time or date to the number of the year, starting from a certain fixed point in the past.
4395

4396 4397
===toRelativeMonthNum===
- Converts a date with time or date to the number of the month, starting from a certain fixed point in the past.
4398

4399 4400
===toRelativeWeekNum===
- Converts a date with time or date to the number of the week, starting from a certain fixed point in the past.
4401

4402 4403
===toRelativeDayNum===
- Converts a date with time or date to the number of the day, starting from a certain fixed point in the past.
4404

4405 4406
===toRelativeHourNum===
- Converts a date with time or date to the number of the hour, starting from a certain fixed point in the past.
4407

4408 4409
===toRelativeMinuteNum===
- Converts a date with time or date to the number of the minute, starting from a certain fixed point in the past.
4410

4411 4412
===toRelativeSecondNum===
- Converts a date with time or date to the number of the second, starting from a certain fixed point in the past.
4413

4414 4415 4416
===now===
Accepts zero arguments and returns the current time at one of the moments of request execution.
This function returns a constant, even if the request took a long time to complete.
4417

4418 4419 4420
===today===
Accepts zero arguments and returns the current date at one of the moments of request execution.
The same as &#39;toDate(now())&#39;.
4421

4422 4423 4424
===yesterday===
Accepts zero arguments and returns yesterday&#39;s date at one of the moments of request execution.
The same as &#39;today() - 1&#39;.
4425

4426 4427 4428
===timeSlot===
- Rounds the time to the half hour.
This function is specific to Yandex.Metrica, since half an hour is the minimum amount of time for breaking a session into two sessions if a counter shows a single user&#39;s consecutive pageviews that differ in time by strictly more than this amount. This means that tuples (the counter number, user ID, and time slot) can be used to search for pageviews that are included in the corresponding session.
4429

4430 4431 4432 4433
===timeSlots(StartTime, Duration)===
- For a time interval starting at &#39;StartTime&#39; and continuing for &#39;Duration&#39; seconds, it returns an array of moments in time, consisting of points from this interval rounded down to the half hour.
For example, %%timeSlots(toDateTime(&#39;2012-01-01 12:20:00&#39;), 600) = [toDateTime(&#39;2012-01-01 12:00:00&#39;), toDateTime(&#39;2012-01-01 12:30:00&#39;)]%%.
This is necessary for searching for pageviews in the corresponding session.
4434 4435


4436
==Functions for working with strings==
4437

4438 4439
===empty===
- Returns 1 for an empty string or 0 for a non-empty string.
4440 4441
The result type is UInt8.
A string is considered non-empty if it contains at least one byte, even if this is a space or a null byte.
4442
The function also works for arrays.
4443

4444 4445
===notEmpty===
- Returns 0 for an empty string or 1 for a non-empty string.
4446
The result type is UInt8.
4447
The function also works for arrays.
4448

4449 4450
===length===
- Returns the length of a string in bytes (not in characters, and not in code points).
4451
The result type is UInt64.
4452
The function also works for arrays.
4453

4454 4455 4456
===lengthUTF8===
- Returns the length of a string in Unicode code points (not in characters), assuming that the string contains a set of bytes that make up UTF-8 encoded text. If this assumption is not met, it returns some result (it doesn&#39;t throw an exception).
The result type is UInt64.
4457

4458 4459
===lower===
- Converts ASCII Latin symbols in a string to lowercase.
4460

4461 4462
===upper===
- Converts ASCII Latin symbols in a string to uppercase.
4463

4464 4465
===lowerUTF8===
- Converts a string to lowercase, assuming the string contains a set of bytes that make up a UTF-8 encoded text. It doesn&#39;t detect the language. So for Turkish the result might not be exactly correct.
4466 4467
If length of UTF-8 sequence is different for upper and lower case of code point, then result for that code point could be incorrect.
If value contains invalid UTF-8, the behavior is unspecified.
4468

4469 4470
===upperUTF8===
- Converts a string to uppercase, assuming the string contains a set of bytes that make up a UTF-8 encoded text. It doesn&#39;t detect the language. So for Turkish the result might not be exactly correct.
4471 4472
If length of UTF-8 sequence is different for upper and lower case of code point, then result for that code point could be incorrect.
If value contains invalid UTF-8, the behavior is unspecified.
4473

4474 4475
===reverse===
- Reverses the string (as a sequence of bytes).
4476

4477 4478
===reverseUTF8===
- Reverses a sequence of Unicode code points, assuming that the string contains a set of bytes representing a UTF-8 text. Otherwise, it does something else (it doesn&#39;t throw an exception).
4479

4480 4481 4482
===concat(s1, s2)===
- Concatenates two strings, without a separator.
If you need to concatenate more than two strings, write &#39;concat&#39; multiple times.
4483

4484 4485
===substring(s, offset, length)===
- Returns a substring starting with the byte from the &#39;offset&#39; index that is &#39;length&#39; bytes long. Character indexing starts from one (as in standard SQL). The &#39;offset&#39; and &#39;length&#39; arguments must be constants.
4486

4487 4488
===substringUTF8(s, offset, length)===
The same as &#39;substring&#39;, but for Unicode code points. Works under the assumption that the string contains a set of bytes representing a UTF-8 encoded text. If this assumption is not met, it returns some result (it doesn&#39;t throw an exception).
4489

4490 4491
===appendTrailingCharIfAbsent(s, c)===
If the %%s%% string is non-empty and does not contain the %%c%% character at the end, it appends the %%c%% character to the end.
4492 4493


4494
==Functions for searching strings==
4495

4496 4497
The search is case-sensitive in all these functions.
The search substring or regular expression must be a constant in all these functions.
4498

4499 4500 4501
===position(haystack, needle)===
- Search for the &#39;needle&#39; substring in the &#39;haystack&#39; string.
Returns the position (in bytes) of the found substring, starting from 1, or returns 0 if the substring was not found.
4502

4503 4504
===positionUTF8(haystack, needle)===
The same as &#39;position&#39;, but the position is returned in Unicode code points. Works under the assumption that the string contains a set of bytes representing a UTF-8 encoded text. If this assumption is not met, it returns some result (it doesn&#39;t throw an exception).
4505

4506 4507
===match(haystack, pattern)===
- Checks whether the string matches the &#39;pattern&#39; regular expression.
4508
The regular expression is re2.
4509
Returns 0 if it doesn&#39;t match, or 1 if it matches.
4510

4511
Note that the backslash symbol (%%\%%) is used for escaping in the regular expression. The same symbol is used for escaping in string literals. So in order to escape the symbol in a regular expression, you must write two backslashes (%%\\%%) in a string literal.
4512

4513
The regular expression works with the string as if it is a set of bytes.
4514
The regular expression can&#39;t contain null bytes.
4515
For patterns to search for substrings in a string, it is better to use LIKE or &#39;position&#39;, since they work much faster.
4516

4517 4518
===extract(haystack, pattern)===
Extracts a fragment of a string using a regular expression. If &#39;haystack&#39; doesn&#39;t match the &#39;pattern&#39; regex, an empty string is returned. If the regex doesn&#39;t contain subpatterns, it takes the fragment that matches the entire regex. Otherwise, it takes the fragment that matches the first subpattern.
4519

4520 4521
===extractAll(haystack, pattern)===
Extracts all the fragments of a string using a regular expression. If &#39;haystack&#39; doesn&#39;t match the &#39;pattern&#39; regex, an empty string is returned. Returns an array of strings consisting of all matches to the regex. In general, the behavior is the same as the &#39;extract&#39; function (it takes the first subpattern, or the entire expression if there isn&#39;t a subpattern).
4522

4523 4524 4525 4526
===like(haystack, pattern), haystack LIKE pattern operator===
- Checks whether a string matches a simple regular expression. The regular expression can contain the metasymbols %%%%% and %%_%%.
%%%%% indicates any quantity of any bytes (including zero characters).
%%_%% indicates any one byte.
4527

4528
Use the backslash (%%\%%) for escaping metasymbols. See the note on escaping in the description of the &#39;match&#39; function.
4529

4530
For regular expressions like%%%needle%%%, the code is more optimal and works as fast as the &#39;position&#39; function. For other regular expressions, the code is the same as for the &#39;match&#39; function.
4531

4532 4533
===notLike(haystack, pattern), haystack NOT LIKE pattern operator===
The same thing as &#39;like&#39;, but negative.
4534 4535


4536
==Functions for searching and replacing in strings==
4537

4538 4539 4540
===replaceOne(haystack, pattern, replacement)===
Replaces the first occurrence, if it exists, of the &#39;pattern&#39; substring in &#39;haystack&#39; with the &#39;replacement&#39; substring.
Hereafter, &#39;pattern&#39; and &#39;replacement&#39; must be constants.
4541

4542 4543
===replaceAll(haystack, pattern, replacement)===
Replaces all occurrences of the &#39;pattern&#39; substring in &#39;haystack&#39; with the &#39;replacement&#39; substring.
4544

4545 4546
===replaceRegexpOne(haystack, pattern, replacement)===
Replacement using the &#39;pattern&#39; regular expression. A re2 regular expression. Replaces only the first occurrence, if it exists.
4547 4548 4549 4550
A pattern can be specified as &#39;replacement&#39;. This pattern can include substitutions \0-\9\.
The substitution \0 includes the entire regular expression.
The substitutions \1-\9 include the subpattern corresponding to the number.
In order to specify the \ symbol in a pattern, you must use a \ symbol to escape it.
4551
Also keep in mind that a string literal requires an extra escape.
4552

4553
Example 1. Converting the date to American format:
4554

4555
%%
4556 4557 4558 4559 4560 4561 4562 4563 4564 4565 4566 4567 4568 4569
SELECT DISTINCT
    EventDate,
    replaceRegexpOne(toString(EventDate), &#39;(\\d{4})-(\\d{2})-(\\d{2})&#39;, &#39;\\2/\\3/\\1&#39;) AS res
FROM test.hits
LIMIT 7
FORMAT TabSeparated

2014-03-17      03/17/2014
2014-03-18      03/18/2014
2014-03-19      03/19/2014
2014-03-20      03/20/2014
2014-03-21      03/21/2014
2014-03-22      03/22/2014
2014-03-23      03/23/2014
4570
%%
4571

4572
Example 2. Copy the string ten times:
4573

4574
%%
4575 4576 4577 4578 4579
SELECT replaceRegexpOne(&#39;Hello, World!&#39;, &#39;.*&#39;, &#39;\\0\\0\\0\\0\\0\\0\\0\\0\\0\\0&#39;) AS res

┌─res────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ Hello, World!Hello, World!Hello, World!Hello, World!Hello, World!Hello, World!Hello, World!Hello, World!Hello, World!Hello, World! │
└────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
4580
%%
4581

4582 4583
===replaceRegexpAll(haystack, pattern, replacement)===
This does the same thing, but replaces all the occurrences. Example:
4584

4585
%%
4586 4587 4588 4589 4590
SELECT replaceRegexpAll(&#39;Hello, World!&#39;, &#39;.&#39;, &#39;\\0\\0&#39;) AS res

┌─res────────────────────────┐
│ HHeelllloo,,  WWoorrlldd!! │
└────────────────────────────┘
4591
%%
4592

4593
As an exception, if a regular expression worked on an empty substring, the replacement is not made more than once. Example:
4594

4595
%%
4596 4597 4598 4599 4600
SELECT replaceRegexpAll(&#39;Hello, World!&#39;, &#39;^&#39;, &#39;here: &#39;) AS res

┌─res─────────────────┐
│ here: Hello, World! │
└─────────────────────┘
4601
%%
4602

4603
==Functions for working with arrays==
4604

4605 4606
===empty===
- Returns 1 for an empty array, or 0 for a non-empty array.
4607
The result type is UInt8.
4608
The function also works for strings.
4609

4610 4611
===notEmpty===
- Returns 0 for an empty array, or 1 for a non-empty array.
4612
The result type is UInt8.
4613
The function also works for strings.
4614

4615 4616
===length===
- Returns the number of items in the array.
4617
The result type is UInt64.
4618
The function also works for strings.
4619

4620 4621 4622 4623 4624 4625
===emptyArrayUInt8, emptyArrayUInt16, emptyArrayUInt32, emptyArrayUInt64===
===emptyArrayInt8, emptyArrayInt16, emptyArrayInt32, emptyArrayInt64===
===emptyArrayFloat32, emptyArrayFloat64===
===emptyArrayDate, emptyArrayDateTime===
===emptyArrayString===
Accepts zero arguments and returns an empty array of the appropriate type.
4626

4627 4628 4629
===range(N)===
- Returns an array of numbers from 0 to N-1.
Just in case, an exception is thrown if arrays with a total length of more than 100,000,000 elements are created in a data block.
4630

4631 4632
===array(x1, ...), [x1, ...] operator===
- Creates an array from the function arguments.
4633
The arguments must be constants and have types that have the smallest common type. At least one argument must be passed, because otherwise it isn&#39;t clear which type of array to create. That is, you can&#39;t use this function to create an empty array (to do that, use the &#39;emptyArray*&#39; function described above).
4634
Returns an &#39;Array(T)&#39; type result, where &#39;T&#39; is the smallest common type out of the passed arguments.
4635

4636 4637
===arrayElement(arr, n), arr[n] operator===
- Get the element with the index &#39;n&#39; from the array &#39;arr&#39;.
4638 4639
&#39;n&#39; should be any integer type.
Indexes in an array begin from one.
4640
Negative indexes are supported - in this case, it selects the corresponding element numbered from the end. For example, &#39;arr[-1]&#39; is the last item in the array.
4641

4642
If the index goes beyond the array bounds:
4643
- if both arguments are constants, an exception is thrown.
4644
- otherwise, a default value is returned (0 for numbers, an empty string for strings, etc.).
4645

4646 4647
===has(arr, elem)===
- Checking whether the &#39;arr&#39; array has the &#39;elem&#39; element.
4648
Returns 0 if the the element is not in the array, or 1 if it is.
4649
&#39;elem&#39; must be a constant.
4650

4651 4652
===indexOf(arr, x)===
- Returns the index of the &#39;x&#39; element (starting from 1) if it is in the array, or 0 if it is not.
4653

4654 4655
===countEqual(arr, x)===
- Returns the number of elements in the array equal to &#39;x&#39;. Equivalent to <span class="inline-example">arrayCount(elem -> elem = x, arr)</span>.
4656

4657 4658
===arrayEnumerate(arr)===
- Returns the array %%[1, 2, 3, ..., length(arr)]%%
4659

4660
This function is normally used together with ARRAY JOIN. It allows counting something just once for each array after applying ARRAY JOIN. Example:
4661

4662
%%
4663 4664 4665 4666 4667 4668 4669 4670 4671 4672 4673 4674 4675
SELECT
    count() AS Reaches,
    countIf(num = 1) AS Hits
FROM test.hits
ARRAY JOIN
    GoalsReached,
    arrayEnumerate(GoalsReached) AS num
WHERE CounterID = 160656
LIMIT 10

┌─Reaches─┬──Hits─┐
│   95606 │ 31406 │
└─────────┴───────┘
4676
%%
4677

4678
In this example, Reaches is the number of conversions (the strings received after applying ARRAY JOIN), and Hits is the number of pageviews (strings before ARRAY JOIN). In this particular case, you can get the same result in an easier way:
4679

4680
%%
4681 4682 4683 4684 4685 4686 4687 4688 4689
SELECT
    sum(length(GoalsReached)) AS Reaches,
    count() AS Hits
FROM test.hits
WHERE (CounterID = 160656) AND notEmpty(GoalsReached)

┌─Reaches─┬──Hits─┐
│   95606 │ 31406 │
└─────────┴───────┘
4690
%%
4691

4692
This function can also be used in higher-order functions. For example, you can use it to get array indexes for elements that match a condition.
4693

4694 4695 4696
===arrayEnumerateUniq(arr, ...)===
- Returns an array the same size as the source array, indicating for each element what its position is among elements with the same value.
For example: %%arrayEnumerateUniq([10, 20, 10, 30]) = [1,  1,  2,  1]%%.
4697

4698
This function is useful when using ARRAY JOIN and aggregation of array elements. Example:
4699

4700
%%
4701 4702 4703 4704 4705 4706 4707 4708 4709 4710 4711 4712 4713 4714 4715 4716 4717 4718 4719 4720 4721 4722 4723 4724 4725
SELECT
    Goals.ID AS GoalID,
    sum(Sign) AS Reaches,
    sumIf(Sign, num = 1) AS Visits
FROM test.visits
ARRAY JOIN
    Goals,
    arrayEnumerateUniq(Goals.ID) AS num
WHERE CounterID = 160656
GROUP BY GoalID
ORDER BY Reaches DESC
LIMIT 10

┌──GoalID─┬─Reaches─┬─Visits─┐
│   53225 │    3214 │   1097 │
│ 2825062 │    3188 │   1097 │
│   56600 │    2803 │    488 │
│ 1989037 │    2401 │    365 │
│ 2830064 │    2396 │    910 │
│ 1113562 │    2372 │    373 │
│ 3270895 │    2262 │    812 │
│ 1084657 │    2262 │    345 │
│   56599 │    2260 │    799 │
│ 3271094 │    2256 │    812 │
└─────────┴─────────┴────────┘
4726
%%
4727

4728
In this example, each goal ID has a calculation of the number of conversions (each element in the Goals nested data structure is a goal that was reached, which we refer to as a conversion) and the number of sessions. Without ARRAY JOIN, we would have counted the number of sessions as %%sum(Sign)%%. But in this particular case, the rows were multiplied by the nested Goals structure, so in order to count each session one time after this, we apply a condition to the value of the %%arrayEnumerateUniq(Goals.ID)%% function.
4729

4730
The arrayEnumerateUniq function can take multiple arrays of the same size as arguments. In this case, uniqueness is considered for tuples of elements in the same positions in all the arrays.
4731

4732
%%
4733 4734 4735 4736 4737
SELECT arrayEnumerateUniq([1, 1, 1, 2, 2, 2], [1, 1, 2, 1, 1, 2]) AS res

┌─res───────────┐
│ [1,2,1,1,2,1] │
└───────────────┘
4738
%%
4739

4740
This is necessary when using ARRAY JOIN with a nested data structure and further aggregation across multiple elements in this structure.
4741

4742 4743
===arrayJoin(arr)===
- A special function. See the section &quot;arrayJoin function&quot;.
4744 4745


4746
==Higher-order functions==
4747

4748
<h3><span class="inline-example">-></span> operator, lambda(params, expr) function</h3>
4749
Allows describing a lambda function for passing to a higher-order function. The left side of the arrow has a formal parameter - any ID, or multiple formal parameters - any IDs in a tuple. The right side of the arrow has an expression that can use these formal parameters, as well as any table columns.
4750

4751
Examples: <span class="inline-example">x -> 2 * x</span>, <span class="inline-example">str -> str != Referer</span>.
4752

4753
Higher-order functions can only accept lambda functions as their functional argument.
4754

4755
A lambda function that accepts multiple arguments can be passed to a higher-order function. In this case, the higher-order function is passed several arrays of identical length that these arguments will correspond to.
4756

4757
For all functions other than &#39;arrayMap&#39; and &#39;arrayFilter&#39;, the first argument (the lambda function) can be omitted. In this case, identical mapping is assumed.
4758

4759 4760
===arrayMap(func, arr1, ...)===
Returns an array obtained from the original application of the &#39;func&#39; function to each element in the &#39;arr&#39; array.
4761

4762 4763
===arrayFilter(func, arr1, ...)===
Returns an array containing only the elements in &#39;arr1&#39; for which &#39;func&#39; returns something other than 0.
4764

4765
Examples:
4766

4767
%%
4768 4769 4770 4771 4772 4773 4774 4775 4776 4777 4778 4779 4780 4781 4782 4783
SELECT arrayFilter(x -> x LIKE &#39;%World%&#39;, [&#39;Hello&#39;, &#39;abc World&#39;]) AS res

┌─res───────────┐
│ [&#39;abc World&#39;] │
└───────────────┘

SELECT
    arrayFilter(
        (i, x) -> x LIKE &#39;%World%&#39;,
        arrayEnumerate(arr),
        [&#39;Hello&#39;, &#39;abc World&#39;] AS arr)
    AS res

┌─res─┐
│ [2] │
└─────┘
4784
%%
4785

4786 4787
===arrayCount([func,] arr1, ...)===
Returns the number of elements in &#39;arr&#39; for which &#39;func&#39; returns something other than 0. If &#39;func&#39; is not specified, it returns the number of non-zero items in the array.
4788

4789 4790
===arrayExists([func,] arr1, ...)===
Returns 1 if there is at least one element in &#39;arr&#39; for which &#39;func&#39; returns something other than 0. Otherwise, it returns 0.
4791

4792 4793
===arrayAll([func,] arr1, ...)===
Returns 1 if &#39;func&#39; returns something other than 0 for all the elements in &#39;arr&#39;. Otherwise, it returns 0.
4794

4795 4796
===arraySum([func,] arr1, ...)===
Returns the sum of the &#39;func&#39; values. If the function is omitted, it just returns the sum of the array elements.
4797

4798 4799
===arrayFirst(func, arr1, ...)===
Returns the first element in the &#39;arr1&#39; array for which &#39;func&#39; returns something other than 0.
4800

4801 4802
===arrayFirstIndex(func, arr1, ...)===
Returns the index of the first element in the &#39;arr1&#39; array for which &#39;func&#39; returns something other than 0.
4803 4804


4805
==Functions for splitting and merging strings and arrays==
4806

4807 4808
===splitByChar(separator, s)===
- Splits a string into substrings, using &#39;separator&#39; as the separator.
4809
&#39;separator&#39; must be a string constant consisting of exactly one character.
4810
Returns an array of selected substrings. Empty substrings may be selected if the separator occurs at the beginning or end of the string, or if there are multiple consecutive separators.
4811

4812 4813
===splitByString(separator, s)===
- The same as above, but it uses a string of multiple characters as the separator. The string must be non-empty.
4814

4815 4816 4817
===alphaTokens(s)===
- Selects substrings of consecutive bytes from the range a-z and A-Z.
Returns an array of selected substrings.
4818 4819


4820
==Functions for working with URLs==
4821

4822
All these functions don&#39;t follow the RFC. They are maximally simplified for improved performance.
4823

4824
===Functions that extract part of a URL===
4825

4826
If there isn&#39;t anything similar in a URL, an empty string is returned.
4827 4828

<h4>protocol</h4>
4829
- Selects the protocol. Examples: http, ftp, mailto, magnet...
4830 4831

<h4>domain</h4>
4832
- Selects the domain.
4833 4834

<h4>domainWithoutWWW</h4>
4835
- Selects the domain and removes no more than one &#39;www.&#39; from the beginning of it, if present.
4836 4837

<h4>topLevelDomain</h4>
4838
- Selects the top-level domain. Example: .ru.
4839 4840

<h4>firstSignificantSubdomain</h4>
4841
- Selects the &quot;first significant subdomain&quot;. This is a non-standard concept specific to Yandex.Metrica.
4842 4843
The first significant subdomain is a second-level domain if it is &#39;com&#39;, &#39;net&#39;, &#39;org&#39;, or &#39;co&#39;. Otherwise, it is a third-level domain.
For example, firstSignificantSubdomain(&#39;https://news.yandex.ru/&#39;) = &#39;yandex&#39;, firstSignificantSubdomain(&#39;https://news.yandex.com.tr/&#39;) = &#39;yandex&#39;.
4844
The list of &quot;insignificant&quot; second-level domains and other implementation details may change in the future.
4845 4846

<h4>cutToFirstSignificantSubdomain</h4>
4847 4848
- Selects the part of the domain that includes top-level subdomains up to the &quot;first significant subdomain&quot; (see the explanation above).
For example, cutToFirstSignificantSubdomain(&#39;https://news.yandex.com.tr/&#39;) = &#39;yandex.com.tr&#39;.
4849 4850

<h4>path</h4>
4851 4852
- Selects the path. Example: /top/news.html
The path does not include the query-string.
4853 4854

<h4>pathFull</h4>
4855
- The same as above, but including query-string and fragment. Example: /top/news.html?page=2#comments
4856 4857

<h4>queryString</h4>
4858 4859
- Selects the query-string. Example: page=1&amp;lr=213.
query-string does not include the first question mark, or # and everything that comes after #.
4860 4861

<h4>fragment</h4>
4862 4863
- Selects the fragment identifier.
fragment does not include the first number sign (#).
4864 4865

<h4>queryStringAndFragment</h4>
4866
- Selects the query-string and fragment identifier. Example: page=1#29390.
4867 4868

<h4>extractURLParameter(URL, name)</h4>
4869
- Selects the value of the &#39;name&#39; parameter in the URL, if present. Otherwise, selects an empty string. If there are many parameters with this name, it returns the first occurrence. This function works under the assumption that the parameter name is encoded in the URL in exactly the same way as in the argument passed.
4870 4871

<h4>extractURLParameters(URL)</h4>
4872
- Gets an array of name=value strings corresponding to the URL parameters. The values are not decoded in any way.
4873 4874

<h4>extractURLParameterNames(URL)</h4>
4875
- Gets an array of name=value strings corresponding to the names of URL parameters. The values are not decoded in any way.
4876 4877

<h4>URLHierarchy(URL)</h4>
4878
- Gets an array containing the URL trimmed to the %%/%%, %%?%% characters in the path and query-string.  Consecutive separator characters are counted as one. The cut is made in the position after all the consecutive separator characters. Example:
4879 4880

<h4>URLPathHierarchy(URL)</h4>
4881
- The same thing, but without the protocol and host in the result. The / element (root) is not included. Example:
4882

4883
This function is used for implementing tree-view reports by URL in Yandex.Metrica.
4884

4885
%%
4886 4887 4888 4889 4890
URLPathHierarchy(&#39;https://example.com/browse/CONV-6788&#39;) =
[
    &#39;/browse/&#39;,
    &#39;/browse/CONV-6788&#39;
]
4891
%%
4892

4893
===Functions that remove part of a URL.===
4894

4895
If the URL doesn&#39;t have anything similar, the URL remains unchanged.
4896 4897

<h4>cutWWW</h4>
4898
- Removes no more than one &#39;www.&#39; from the beginning of the URL&#39;s domain, if present.
4899 4900

<h4>cutQueryString</h4>
4901
- Removes the query-string. The question mark is also removed.
4902 4903

<h4>cutFragment</h4>
4904
- Removes the fragment identifier. The number sign is also removed.
4905 4906

<h4>cutQueryStringAndFragment</h4>
4907
- Removes the query-string and fragment identifier. The question mark and number sign are also removed.
4908 4909

<h4>cutURLParameter(URL, name)</h4>
4910
- Removes the URL parameter named &#39;name&#39;, if present. This function works under the assumption that the parameter name is encoded in the URL exactly the same way as in the passed argument.
4911 4912


4913
==Functions for working with IP addresses==
4914

4915 4916
===IPv4NumToString(num)===
Takes a UInt32 number. Interprets it as an IPv4 address in big endian. Returns a string containing the corresponding IPv4 address in the format A.B.C.d (dot-separated numbers in decimal form).
4917

4918 4919
===IPv4StringToNum(s)===
The reverse function of IPv4NumToString. If the IPv4 address has an invalid format, it returns 0.
4920

4921 4922
===IPv4NumToStringClassC(num)===
Similar to IPv4NumToString, but using %%xxx%% instead of the last octet. Example:
4923

4924
%%
4925 4926 4927 4928 4929 4930 4931 4932 4933 4934 4935 4936 4937 4938 4939 4940 4941 4942 4943 4944
SELECT
    IPv4NumToStringClassC(ClientIP) AS k,
    count() AS c
FROM test.hits
GROUP BY k
ORDER BY c DESC
LIMIT 10

┌─k──────────────┬─────c─┐
│ 83.149.9.xxx   │ 26238 │
│ 217.118.81.xxx │ 26074 │
│ 213.87.129.xxx │ 25481 │
│ 83.149.8.xxx   │ 24984 │
│ 217.118.83.xxx │ 22797 │
│ 78.25.120.xxx  │ 22354 │
│ 213.87.131.xxx │ 21285 │
│ 78.25.121.xxx  │ 20887 │
│ 188.162.65.xxx │ 19694 │
│ 83.149.48.xxx  │ 17406 │
└────────────────┴───────┘
4945
%%
4946

4947
Since using &#39;xxx&#39; is highly unusual, this may be changed in the future. We recommend that you don&#39;t rely on the exact format of this fragment.
4948

4949 4950 4951
===IPv6NumToString(x)===
Accepts a FixedString(16) value containing the IPv6 address in binary format. Returns a string containing this address in text format.
IPv6-mapped IPv4 addresses are output in the format %%::ffff:111.222.33.44%%. Examples:
4952

4953
%%
4954 4955 4956 4957 4958
SELECT IPv6NumToString(toFixedString(unhex(&#39;2A0206B8000000000000000000000011&#39;), 16)) AS addr

┌─addr─────────┐
│ 2a02:6b8::11 │
└──────────────┘
4959
%%
4960

4961
%%
4962 4963 4964 4965 4966 4967 4968 4969 4970 4971 4972 4973 4974 4975 4976 4977 4978 4979 4980 4981 4982
SELECT
    IPv6NumToString(ClientIP6 AS k),
    count() AS c
FROM hits_all
WHERE EventDate = today() AND substring(ClientIP6, 1, 12) != unhex(&#39;00000000000000000000FFFF&#39;)
GROUP BY k
ORDER BY c DESC
LIMIT 10

┌─IPv6NumToString(ClientIP6)──────────────┬─────c─┐
│ 2a02:2168:aaa:bbbb::2                   │ 24695 │
│ 2a02:2698:abcd:abcd:abcd:abcd:8888:5555 │ 22408 │
│ 2a02:6b8:0:fff::ff                      │ 16389 │
│ 2a01:4f8:111:6666::2                    │ 16016 │
│ 2a02:2168:888:222::1                    │ 15896 │
│ 2a01:7e00::ffff:ffff:ffff:222           │ 14774 │
│ 2a02:8109:eee:ee:eeee:eeee:eeee:eeee    │ 14443 │
│ 2a02:810b:8888:888:8888:8888:8888:8888  │ 14345 │
│ 2a02:6b8:0:444:4444:4444:4444:4444      │ 14279 │
│ 2a01:7e00::ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff          │ 13880 │
└─────────────────────────────────────────┴───────┘
4983
%%
4984

4985
%%
4986 4987 4988 4989 4990 4991 4992 4993 4994 4995 4996 4997 4998 4999 5000 5001 5002 5003 5004 5005 5006
SELECT
    IPv6NumToString(ClientIP6 AS k),
    count() AS c
FROM hits_all
WHERE EventDate = today()
GROUP BY k
ORDER BY c DESC
LIMIT 10

┌─IPv6NumToString(ClientIP6)─┬──────c─┐
│ ::ffff:94.26.111.111       │ 747440 │
│ ::ffff:37.143.222.4        │ 529483 │
│ ::ffff:5.166.111.99        │ 317707 │
│ ::ffff:46.38.11.77         │ 263086 │
│ ::ffff:79.105.111.111      │ 186611 │
│ ::ffff:93.92.111.88        │ 176773 │
│ ::ffff:84.53.111.33        │ 158709 │
│ ::ffff:217.118.11.22       │ 154004 │
│ ::ffff:217.118.11.33       │ 148449 │
│ ::ffff:217.118.11.44       │ 148243 │
└────────────────────────────┴────────┘
5007
%%
5008

5009 5010 5011
===IPv6StringToNum(s)===
The reverse function of IPv6NumToString. If the IPv6 address has an invalid format, it returns a string of null bytes.
HEX can be uppercase or lowercase.
5012 5013


5014
==Functions for generating pseudo-random numbers==
5015

5016
Non-cryptographic generators of pseudo-random numbers are used.
5017

5018
All the functions accept zero arguments or one argument.
5019
If an argument is passed, it can be any type, and its value is not used for anything.
5020
The only purpose of this argument is to prevent common subexpression elimination, so that two different instances of the same function return different columns with different random numbers.
5021

5022 5023 5024
===rand===
- Returns a pseudo-random UInt32 number, evenly distributed among all UInt32-type numbers.
Uses a linear congruential generator.
5025

5026 5027 5028
===rand64===
- Returns a pseudo-random UInt64 number, evenly distributed among all UInt64-type numbers.
Uses a linear congruential generator.
5029 5030


5031
==Hash functions==
5032

5033
Hash functions can be used for deterministic pseudo-random shuffling of elements.
5034

5035 5036
===halfMD5===
- Calculates the MD5 from a string. Then it takes the first 8 bytes of the hash and interprets them as UInt64 in big endian.
5037 5038
Accepts a String-type argument. Returns UInt64.
This function works fairly slowly (5 million short strings per second per processor core).
5039
If you don&#39;t need MD5 in particular, use the &#39;sipHash64&#39; function instead.
5040

5041 5042
===MD5===
- Calculates the MD5 from a string and returns the resulting set of bytes as FixedString(16).
5043
If you don&#39;t need MD5 in particular, but you need a decent cryptographic 128-bit hash, use the &#39;sipHash128&#39; function instead.
5044
If you need the same result as gives 'md5sum' utility, write %%lower(hex(MD5(s)))%%.
5045

5046 5047
===sipHash64===
- Calculates SipHash from a string.
5048
Accepts a String-type argument. Returns UInt64.
5049
SipHash is a cryptographic hash function. It works at least three times faster than MD5. For more information, see <a href="https://131002.net/siphash/">https://131002.net/siphash/</a>
5050

5051 5052
===sipHash128===
- Calculates SipHash from a string.
5053
Accepts a String-type argument. Returns FixedString(16).
5054
Differs from sipHash64 in that the final xor-folding state is only done up to 128 bytes.
5055

5056 5057
===cityHash64===
- Calculates CityHash64 from a string or a similar hash function for any number of any type of arguments.
5058 5059 5060
For String-type arguments, CityHash is used. This is a fast non-cryptographic hash function for strings with decent quality.
For other types of arguments, a decent implementation-specific fast non-cryptographic hash function is used.
If multiple arguments are passed, the function is calculated using the same rules and chain combinations using the CityHash combinator.
5061
For example, you can compute the checksum of an entire table with accuracy up to the row order: %%SELECT sum(cityHash64(*)) FROM table%%.
5062

5063 5064 5065
===intHash32===
- Calculates a 32-bit hash code from any type of integer.
This is a relatively fast non-cryptographic hash function of average quality for numbers.
5066

5067 5068 5069
===intHash64===
- Calculates a 64-bit hash code from any type of integer.
It works faster than intHash32. Average quality.
5070

5071 5072 5073 5074
===SHA1===
===SHA224===
===SHA256===
- Calculates SHA-1, SHA-224, or SHA-256 from a string and returns the resulting set of bytes as FixedString(20), FixedString(28), or FixedString(32).
5075 5076
The function works fairly slowly (SHA-1 processes about 5 million short strings per second per processor core, while SHA-224 and SHA-256 process about 2.2 million).
We recommend using this function only in cases when you need a specific hash function and you can&#39;t select it.
5077
Even in these cases, we recommend applying the function offline and pre-calculating values when inserting them into the table, instead of applying it in SELECTS.
5078

5079 5080
===URLHash(url[, N])===
A fast, decent-quality non-cryptographic hash function for a string obtained from a URL using some type of normalization.
5081 5082
URLHash(s) - Calculates a hash from a string without one of the trailing symbols /,? or # at the end, if present.
URL Hash(s, N) - Calculates a hash from a string up to the N level in the URL hierarchy, without one of the trailing symbols /,? or # at the end, if present.
5083
Levels are the same as in URLHierarchy. This function is specific to Yandex.Metrica.
5084

5085
==Encoding functions==
5086

5087 5088
===hex===
Accepts a string, number, date, or date with time. Returns a string containing the argument&#39;s hexadecimal representation. Uses uppercase letters A-F. Doesn&#39;t use %%0x%% prefixes or %%h%% suffixes. For strings, all bytes are simply encoded as two hexadecimal numbers. Numbers are converted to big endian (&quot;human readable&quot;) format. For numbers, older zeros are trimmed, but only by entire bytes. For example, %%hex(1) = &#39;01&#39;%%. Dates are encoded as the number of days since the beginning of the Unix Epoch. Dates with times are encoded as the number of seconds since the beginning of the Unix Epoch.
5089

5090 5091 5092
===unhex(str)===
Accepts a string containing any number of hexadecimal digits, and returns a string containing the corresponding bytes. Supports both uppercase and lowercase letters A-F. The number of hexadecimal digits doesn&#39;t have to be even. If it is odd, the last digit is interpreted as the younger half of the 00-0F byte. If the argument string contains anything other than hexadecimal digits, some implementation-defined result is returned (an exception isn&#39;t thrown).
If you want to convert the result to a number, you can use the functions &#39;reverse&#39; and &#39;reinterpretAs<i>Type</i>&#39;.
5093

5094 5095
===bitmaskToList(num)===
Accepts an integer. Returns a string containing the list of powers of two that total the source number when summed. They are comma-separated without spaces in text format, in ascending order.
5096

5097 5098
===bitmaskToArray(num)===
Accepts an integer. Returns an array of UInt64 numbers containing the list of powers of two that total the source number when summed. Numbers in the array are in ascending order.
5099 5100


5101
==Rounding functions==
5102

5103 5104 5105
===floor(x[, N])===
Returns a rounder number that is less than or equal to &#39;x&#39;.
A round number is a multiple of <span class="inline-example">1 / 10<sup>N</sup></span>, or the nearest number of the appropriate data type if <span class="inline-example">1 / 10<sup>N</sup></span> isn&#39;t exact.
5106 5107
&#39;N&#39; is an integer constant, optional parameter. By default it is zero, which means to round to an integer.
&#39;N&#39; may be negative.
5108
Examples: %%floor(123.45, 1) = 123.4%%, %%floor(123.45, -1) = 120%%.
5109 5110
&#39;x&#39; is any numeric type. The result is a number of the same type.
For integer arguments, it makes sense to round with a negative &#39;N&#39; value (for non-negative &#39;N&#39;, the function doesn&#39;t do anything).
5111
If rounding causes overflow (for example, %%floor(-128, -1)%%), an implementation-specific result is returned.
5112

5113 5114
===ceil(x[, N])===
Returns the smallest round number that is greater than or equal to &#39;x&#39;. In every other way, it is the same as the &#39;floor&#39; function (see above).
5115

5116 5117
===round(x[, N])===
Returns the round number nearest to &#39;num&#39;, which may be less than, greater than, or equal to &#39;x&#39;.
5118 5119
If &#39;x&#39; is exactly in the middle between the nearest round numbers, one of them is returned (implementation-specific).
The number &#39;-0.&#39; may or may not be considered round (implementation-specific).
5120
In every other way, this function is the same as &#39;floor&#39; and &#39;ceil&#39; described above.
5121

5122 5123
===roundToExp2(num)===
Accepts a number. If the number is less than one, it returns 0. Otherwise, it rounds the number down to the nearest (whole non-negative) degree of two.
5124

5125 5126
===roundDuration(num)===
Accepts a number. If the number is less than one, it returns 0. Otherwise, it rounds the number down to numbers from the set: 1, 10, 30, 60, 120, 180, 240, 300, 600, 1200, 1800, 3600, 7200, 18000, 36000. This function is specific to Yandex.Metrica and used for implementing the report on session length.
5127

5128 5129
===roundAge(num)===
Accepts a number. If the number is less than 18, it returns 0. Otherwise, it rounds the number down to numbers from the set: 18, 25, 35, 45. This function is specific to Yandex.Metrica and used for implementing the report on user age.
5130 5131 5132



5133
==Conditional functions==
5134

5135
===if(cond, then, else), cond ? then : else operator===
5136

5137 5138
Returns &#39;then&#39; if &#39;cond != 0&#39;, or &#39;else&#39; if &#39;cond = 0&#39;.
&#39;cond&#39; must be UInt 8, and &#39;then&#39; and &#39;else&#39; must be a type that has the smallest common type.
5139 5140


5141
==Mathematical functions==
5142

5143
All the functions return a Float64 number. The accuracy of the result is close to the maximum precision possible, but the result might not coincide with the machine representable number nearest to the corresponding real number.
5144

5145 5146
===e()===
Accepts zero arguments and returns a Float64 number close to the <i>e</i> number.
5147

5148 5149
===pi()===
Accepts zero arguments and returns a Float64 number close to <i>π</i>.
5150

5151 5152
===exp(x)===
Accepts a numeric argument and returns a Float64 number close to the exponent of the argument.
5153

5154 5155
===log(x)===
Accepts a numeric argument and returns a Float64 number close to the natural logarithm of the argument.
5156

5157 5158
===exp2(x)===
Accepts a numeric argument and returns a Float64 number close to 2<sup>x</sup>.
5159

5160 5161
===log2(x)===
Accepts a numeric argument and returns a Float64 number close to the binary logarithm of the argument.
5162

5163 5164
===exp10(x)===
Accepts a numeric argument and returns a Float64 number close to 10<sup>x</sup>.
5165

5166 5167
===log10(x)===
Accepts a numeric argument and returns a Float64 number close to the decimal logarithm of the argument.
5168

5169 5170
===sqrt(x)===
Accepts a numeric argument and returns a Float64 number close to the square root of the argument.
5171

5172 5173
===cbrt(x)===
Accepts a numeric argument and returns a Float64 number close to the cubic root of the argument.
5174

5175 5176 5177
===erf(x)===
<img src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/math/3/4/4/3443265ce8cb884d9c894401ab15fa71.png"/>
If &#39;x&#39; is non-negative, then %%erf(x / σ√2)%% is the probability that a random variable having a normal distribution with standard deviation &#39;σ&#39; takes the value that is separated from the expected value by more than &#39;x&#39;.
5178

5179
Example (three sigma rule):
5180

5181
%%
5182 5183 5184 5185 5186
SELECT erf(3 / sqrt(2))

┌─erf(divide(3, sqrt(2)))─┐
│      0.9973002039367398 │
└─────────────────────────┘
5187
%%
5188

5189 5190
===erfc(x)===
Accepts a numeric argument and returns a Float64 number close to 1 - erf(x), but without loss of precision for large &#39;x&#39; values.
5191

5192 5193
===lgamma(x)===
The logarithm of the gamma function.
5194

5195 5196
===tgamma(x)===
Gamma function.
5197

5198 5199
===sin(x)===
The sine.
5200

5201 5202
===cos(x)===
The cosine.
5203

5204 5205
===tan(x)===
The tangent.
5206

5207 5208
===asin(x)===
The arc sine.
5209

5210 5211
===acos(x)===
The arc cosine.
5212

5213 5214
===atan(x)===
The arc tangent.
5215

5216 5217
===pow(x, y)===
x<sup>y</sup>.
5218

5219
==Functions for working with Yandex.Metrica dictionaries==
5220

5221
In order for the functions below to work, the server config must specify the paths and addresses for getting all the Yandex.Metrica dictionaries. The dictionaries are loaded at the first call of any of these functions. If the reference lists can&#39;t be loaded, an exception is thrown.
5222

5223
For information about creating reference lists, see the section &quot;Dictionaries&quot;.
5224

5225
===Multiple geobases===
5226

5227
ClickHouse supports working with multiple alternative geobases (regional hierarchies) simultaneously, in order to support various perspectives on which countries certain regions belong to.
5228

5229 5230
The &#39;clickhouse-server&#39; config specifies the file with the regional hierarchy:
<span class="inline-example">&lt;path_to_regions_hierarchy_file>/opt/geo/regions_hierarchy.txt&lt;/path_to_regions_hierarchy_file></span>
5231

5232 5233
Besides this file, it also searches for files nearby that have the _ symbol and any suffix appended to the name (before the file extension).
For example, it will also find the file %%/opt/geo/regions_hierarchy_ua.txt%%, if present.
5234

5235
%%ua%% is called the dictionary key. For a dictionary without a suffix, the key is an empty string.
5236

5237
All the dictionaries are re-loaded in runtime (once every certain number of seconds, as defined in the builtin_dictionaries_reload_interval config parameter, or once an hour by default). However, the list of available dictionaries is defined one time, when the server starts.
5238

5239 5240 5241
All functions for working with regions have an optional argument at the end - the dictionary key. It is indicated as the <i>geobase</i>.
Example:
%%
5242 5243 5244
regionToCountry(RegionID) - Uses the default dictionary: /opt/geo/regions_hierarchy.txt
regionToCountry(RegionID, &#39;&#39;) - Uses the default dictionary: /opt/geo/regions_hierarchy.txt
regionToCountry(RegionID, &#39;ua&#39;) - Uses the dictionary for the &#39;ua&#39; key: /opt/geo/regions_hierarchy_ua.txt
5245
%%
5246

5247
===regionToCity(id[, geobase])===
5248

5249
Accepts a UInt32 number - the region ID from the Yandex geobase. If this region is a city or part of a city, it returns the region ID for the appropriate city. Otherwise, returns 0.
5250

5251
===regionToArea(id[, geobase])===
5252

5253
Converts a region to an area (type 5 in the geobase). In every other way, this function is the same as &#39;regionToCity&#39;.
5254

5255
%%
5256 5257 5258 5259 5260 5261 5262 5263 5264 5265 5266 5267 5268 5269 5270 5271 5272 5273 5274 5275 5276
SELECT DISTINCT regionToName(regionToArea(toUInt32(number), 'ua'), 'en')
FROM system.numbers
LIMIT 15

┌─regionToName(regionToArea(toUInt32(number), \'ua\'), \'en\')─┐
│                                                              │
│ Moscow and Moscow region                                     │
│ Saint-Petersburg and Leningradskaya oblast                   │
│ Belgorod District                                            │
│ Ivanovo district                                             │
│ Kaluga District                                              │
│ Kostroma District                                            │
│ Kursk District                                               │
│ Lipetsk District                                             │
│ Orel District                                                │
│ Ryazhan District                                             │
│ Smolensk District                                            │
│ Tambov District                                              │
│ Tver District                                                │
│ Tula District                                                │
└──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
5277
%%
5278

5279
===regionToDistrict(id[, geobase])===
5280

5281
Converts a region to a federal district (type 4 in the geobase). In every other way, this function is the same as &#39;regionToCity&#39;.
5282

5283
%%
5284 5285 5286 5287 5288 5289 5290 5291 5292 5293 5294 5295 5296 5297 5298 5299 5300 5301 5302 5303 5304
SELECT DISTINCT regionToName(regionToDistrict(toUInt32(number), 'ua'), 'en')
FROM system.numbers
LIMIT 15

┌─regionToName(regionToDistrict(toUInt32(number), \'ua\'), \'en\')─┐
│                                                                  │
│ Central                                                          │
│ Northwest                                                        │
│ South                                                            │
│ North Kavkaz                                                     │
│ Volga Region                                                     │
│ Ural                                                             │
│ Siberian                                                         │
│ Far East                                                         │
│ Scotland                                                         │
│ Faroe Islands                                                    │
│ Flemish Region                                                   │
│ Brussels-Capital Region                                          │
│ Wallonia                                                         │
│ Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina                             │
└──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
5305
%%
5306

5307
===regionToCountry(id[, geobase])===
5308

5309 5310
Converts a region to a country. In every other way, this function is the same as &#39;regionToCity&#39;.
Example: %%regionToCountry(toUInt32(213)) = 225%% converts Moscow (213) to Russia (225).
5311

5312
===regionToContinent(id[, geobase])===
5313

5314 5315
Converts a region to a continent. In every other way, this function is the same as &#39;regionToCity&#39;.
Example: %%regionToContinent(toUInt32(213)) = 10001%% converts Moscow (213) to Eurasia (10001).
5316

5317
===regionToPopulation(id[, geobase])===
5318

5319
Gets the population for a region.
5320 5321
The population can be recorded in files with the geobase. See the section &quot;External dictionaries&quot;.
If the population is not recorded for the region, it returns 0.
5322
In the Yandex geobase, the population might be recorded for child regions, but not for parent regions.
5323

5324
===regionIn(lhs, rhs[, geobase])===
5325

5326 5327
Checks whether a &#39;lhs&#39; region belongs to a &#39;rhs&#39; region. Returns a UInt8 number equal to 1 if it belongs, or 0 if it doesn&#39;t belong.
The relationship is reflexive - any region also belongs to itself.
5328

5329
===regionHierarchy(id[, geobase])===
5330

5331 5332
Accepts a UInt32 number - the region ID from the Yandex geobase. Returns an array of region IDs consisting of the passed region and all parents along the chain.
Example: %%regionHierarchy(toUInt32(213)) = [213,1,3,225,10001,10000]%%.
5333

5334
===regionToName(id[, lang])===
5335

5336
Accepts a UInt32 number - the region ID from the Yandex geobase. A string with the name of the language can be passed as a second argument. Supported languages are: ru, en, ua, uk, by, kz, tr. If the second argument is omitted, the language &#39;ru&#39; is used. If the language is not supported, an exception is thrown. Returns a string - the name of the region in the corresponding language. If the region with the specified ID doesn&#39;t exist, an empty string is returned.
5337

5338
&#39;ua&#39; and &#39;uk&#39; mean the same thing - Ukrainian.
5339

5340
===OSToRoot===
5341

5342
Accepts a UInt8 number - the ID of the operating system from the Yandex.Metrica dictionary. If any OS matches the passed number, it returns a UInt8 number - the ID of the corresponding root OS (for example, it converts Windows Vista to Windows). Otherwise, returns 0.
5343

5344
===OSIn(lhs, rhs)===
5345

5346
Checks whether the &#39;lhs&#39; operating system belongs to the &#39;rhs&#39; operating system.
5347

5348
===OSHierarchy===
5349

5350
Accepts a UInt8 number - the ID of the operating system from the Yandex.Metrica dictionary. Returns an array with a hierarchy of operating systems. Similar to the &#39;regionHierarchy&#39; function.
5351

5352
===SEToRoot===
5353

5354
Accepts a UInt8 number - the ID of the search engine from the Yandex.Metrica dictionary. If any search engine matches the passed number, it returns a UInt8 number - the ID of the corresponding root search engine (for example, it converts Yandex.Images to Yandex). Otherwise, returns 0.
5355

5356
===SEIn(lhs, rhs)===
5357

5358
Checks whether the &#39;lhs&#39; search engine belongs to the &#39;rhs&#39; search engine.
5359

5360
===SEHierarchy===
5361

5362
Accepts a UInt8 number - the ID of the search engine from the Yandex.Metrica dictionary. Returns an array with a hierarchy of search engines. Similar to the &#39;regionHierarchy&#39; function.
5363 5364


5365
==Functions for working with external dictionaries==
5366

5367
For more information, see the section &quot;External dictionaries&quot;.
5368

5369 5370 5371 5372 5373
===dictGetUInt8, dictGetUInt16, dictGetUInt32, dictGetUInt64===
===dictGetInt8, dictGetInt16, dictGetInt32, dictGetInt64===
===dictGetFloat32, dictGetFloat64===
===dictGetDate, dictGetDateTime===
===dictGetString===
5374

5375
<span class="inline-example">dictGet<i>T</i>(&#39;dict_name&#39;, &#39;attr_name&#39;, id)</span>
5376 5377 5378
- Gets the value of the &#39;attr_name&#39; attribute from the &#39;dict_name&#39; dictionary by the &#39;id&#39; key.
&#39;dict_name&#39; and &#39;attr_name&#39; are constant strings.
&#39;id&#39; must be UInt64.
5379
If the &#39;id&#39; key is not in the dictionary, it returns the default value set in the dictionary definition.
5380

5381 5382 5383
===dictIsIn===
%%dictIsIn(&#39;dict_name&#39;, child_id, ancestor_id)%%
- For the &#39;dict_name&#39; hierarchical dictionary, finds out whether the &#39;child_id&#39; key is located inside &#39;ancestor_id&#39; (or matches &#39;ancestor_id&#39;). Returns UInt8.
5384

5385 5386 5387
===dictGetHierarchy===
%%dictGetHierarchy(&#39;dict_name&#39;, id)%%
- For the &#39;dict_name&#39; hierarchical dictionary, returns an array of dictionary keys starting from &#39;id&#39; and continuing along the chain of parent elements. Returns Array(UInt64).
5388 5389


5390
==Functions for working with JSON.==
5391

5392
In Yandex.Metrica, JSON is passed by users as <i>session parameters</i>. There are several functions for working with this JSON. (Although in most of the cases, the JSONs are additionally pre-processed, and the resulting values are put in separate columns in their processed format.) All these functions are based on strong assumptions about what the JSON can be, but they try not to do anything.
5393

5394
The following assumptions are made:
5395 5396 5397

1. The field name (function argument) must be a constant.
2. The field name is somehow canonically encoded in JSON. For example,
5398
%%visitParamHas(&#39;{&quot;abc&quot;:&quot;def&quot;}&#39;, &#39;abc&#39;) = 1%%
5399
, but
5400
%%visitParamHas(&#39;{&quot;\\u0061\\u0062\\u0063&quot;:&quot;def&quot;}&#39;, &#39;abc&#39;) = 0%%
5401 5402 5403 5404
3. Fields are searched for on any nesting level, indiscriminately.  If there are multiple matching fields, the first occurrence is used.
4. JSON doesn&#39;t have space characters outside of string literals.


5405
===visitParamHas(params, name)===
5406

5407
Checks whether there is a field with the &#39;name&#39; name.
5408

5409
===visitParamExtractUInt(params, name)===
5410

5411
Parses UInt64 from the value of the field named &#39;name&#39;. If this is a string field, it tries to parse a number from the beginning of the string. If the field doesn&#39;t exist, or it exists but doesn&#39;t contain a number, it returns 0.
5412

5413
===visitParamExtractInt(params, name)===
5414

5415
The same as for Int64.
5416

5417
===visitParamExtractFloat(params, name)===
5418

5419
The same as for Float64.
5420

5421
===visitParamExtractBool(params, name)===
5422

5423
Parses a true/false value. The result is UInt8.
5424

5425
===visitParamExtractRaw(params, name)===
5426

5427 5428 5429
Returns the value of a field, including separators. Examples:
%%visitParamExtractRaw(&#39;{&quot;abc&quot;:&quot;\\n\\u0000&quot;}&#39;, &#39;abc&#39;) = &#39;&quot;\\n\\u0000&quot;&#39;%%
%%visitParamExtractRaw(&#39;{&quot;abc&quot;:{&quot;def&quot;:[1,2,3]}}&#39;, &#39;abc&#39;) = &#39;{&quot;def&quot;:[1,2,3]}&#39;%%
5430

5431
===visitParamExtractString(params, name)===
5432

5433 5434 5435 5436 5437 5438
Parses the string in double quotes. The value is unescaped. If unescaping failed, it returns an empty string. Examples:
%%visitParamExtractString(&#39;{&quot;abc&quot;:&quot;\\n\\u0000&quot;}&#39;, &#39;abc&#39;) = &#39;\n\0&#39;%%
%%visitParamExtractString(&#39;{&quot;abc&quot;:&quot;\\u263a&quot;}&#39;, &#39;abc&#39;) = &#39;&#39;%%
%%visitParamExtractString(&#39;{&quot;abc&quot;:&quot;\\u263&quot;}&#39;, &#39;abc&#39;) = &#39;&#39;%%
%%visitParamExtractString(&#39;{&quot;abc&quot;:&quot;hello}&#39;, &#39;abc&#39;) = &#39;&#39;%%
Currently, there is no support for code points not from the basic multilingual plane written in the format \uXXXX\uYYYY (they are converted to CESU-8 instead of UTF-8).
5439 5440


5441
==Functions for implementing the IN operator==
5442

5443
===in, notIn, globalIn, globalNotIn===
5444

5445
See the section &quot;IN operators&quot;.
5446

5447 5448 5449

===tuple(x, y, ...), operator (x, y, ...)===
- A function that allows grouping multiple columns.
5450
For columns with the types T1, T2, ..., it returns a Tuple(T1, T2, ...) type tuple containing these columns. There is no cost to execute the function.
5451
Tuples are normally used as intermediate values for an argument of IN operators, or for creating a list of formal parameters of lambda functions. Tuples can&#39;t be written to a table.
5452

5453 5454
===tupleElement(tuple, n), operator x.N===
- A function that allows getting columns from a tuple.
5455
&#39;N&#39; is the column index, starting from 1. &#39;N&#39; must be a constant. &#39;N&#39; must be a strict postive integer no greater than the size of the tuple.
5456
There is no cost to execute the function.
5457 5458


5459
==Other functions==
5460

5461 5462
===hostName()===
- Returns a string with the name of the host that this function was performed on. For distributed processing, this is the name of the remote server host, if the function is performed on a remote server.
5463

5464 5465
===visibleWidth(x)===
- Calculates the approximate width when outputting values to the console in text format (tab-separated). This function is used by the system for implementing Pretty formats.
5466

5467 5468
===toTypeName(x)===
- Gets the type name. Returns a string containing the type name of the passed argument.
5469

5470 5471 5472
===blockSize()===
- Gets the size of the block.
In ClickHouse, queries are always run on blocks (sets of column parts). This function allows getting the size of the block that you called it for.
5473

5474 5475 5476
===materialize(x)===
- Turns a constant into a full column containing just one value.
In ClickHouse, full columns and constants are represented differently in memory. Functions work differently for constant arguments and normal arguments (different code is executed), although the result is almost always the same. This function is for debugging this behavior.
5477

5478 5479 5480
===ignore(...)===
- A function that accepts any arguments and always returns 0.
However, the argument is still calculated. This can be used for benchmarks.
5481

5482 5483
===sleep(seconds)===
Sleeps &#39;seconds&#39; seconds on each data block. You can specify an integer or a floating-point number.
5484

5485 5486 5487
===currentDatabase()===
Returns the name of the current database.
You can use this function in table engine parameters in a CREATE TABLE query where you need to specify the database.
5488

5489 5490
===isFinite(x)===
Accepts Float32 and Float64 and returns UInt8 equal to 1 if the argument is not infinite and not a NaN, otherwise 0.
5491

5492 5493 5494
===isInfinite(x)===
Accepts Float32 and Float64 and returns UInt8 equal to 1 if the argument is infinite, otherwise 0.
Note that 0 is returned for a NaN.
5495

5496 5497
===isNaN(x)===
Accepts Float32 and Float64 and returns UInt8 equal to 1 if the argument is a NaN, otherwise 0.
5498

5499 5500
===bar===
Allows building a unicode-art diagram.
5501

5502
bar(x, min, max, width) - Draws a band with a width proportional to (x - min) and equal to &#39;width&#39; characters when x == max.
5503
min, max - Integer constants. The value must fit in Int64.
5504
width - Constant, positive number, may be a fraction.
5505

5506
The band is drawn with accuracy to one eighth of a symbol. Example:
5507

5508
%%
5509 5510 5511 5512 5513 5514 5515 5516 5517 5518 5519 5520 5521 5522 5523 5524 5525 5526 5527 5528 5529 5530 5531 5532 5533 5534 5535 5536 5537 5538 5539 5540 5541 5542
SELECT
    toHour(EventTime) AS h,
    count() AS c,
    bar(c, 0, 600000, 20) AS bar
FROM test.hits
GROUP BY h
ORDER BY h ASC

┌──h─┬──────c─┬─bar────────────────┐
│  0 │ 292907 │ █████████▋         │
│  1 │ 180563 │ ██████             │
│  2 │ 114861 │ ███▋               │
│  3 │  85069 │ ██▋                │
│  4 │  68543 │ ██▎                │
│  5 │  78116 │ ██▌                │
│  6 │ 113474 │ ███▋               │
│  7 │ 170678 │ █████▋             │
│  8 │ 278380 │ █████████▎         │
│  9 │ 391053 │ █████████████      │
│ 10 │ 457681 │ ███████████████▎   │
│ 11 │ 493667 │ ████████████████▍  │
│ 12 │ 509641 │ ████████████████▊  │
│ 13 │ 522947 │ █████████████████▍ │
│ 14 │ 539954 │ █████████████████▊ │
│ 15 │ 528460 │ █████████████████▌ │
│ 16 │ 539201 │ █████████████████▊ │
│ 17 │ 523539 │ █████████████████▍ │
│ 18 │ 506467 │ ████████████████▊  │
│ 19 │ 520915 │ █████████████████▎ │
│ 20 │ 521665 │ █████████████████▍ │
│ 21 │ 542078 │ ██████████████████ │
│ 22 │ 493642 │ ████████████████▍  │
│ 23 │ 400397 │ █████████████▎     │
└────┴────────┴────────────────────┘
5543
%%
5544

5545 5546 5547
===transform===
Transforms a value according to the explicitly defined mapping of some elements to other ones.
There are two variations of this function:
5548

5549
1. %%transform(x, array_from, array_to, default)%%
5550

5551 5552 5553 5554
%%x%% - What to transform.
%%array_from%% - Constant array of values for converting.
%%array_to%% - Constant array of values to convert the values in &#39;from&#39; to.
%%default%% - Constant. Which value to use if &#39;x&#39; is not equal to one of the values in &#39;from&#39;.
5555

5556
&#39;array_from&#39; and &#39;array_to&#39; are arrays of the same size.
5557

5558 5559
Types:
<span class="inline-example">transform(T, Array(T), Array(U), U) -> U</span>
5560

5561
&#39;T&#39; and &#39;U&#39; can be numeric, string, or Date or DateTime types.
5562
Where the same letter is indicated (T or U), for numeric types these might not be matching types, but types that have a common type.
5563
For example, the first argument can have the Int64 type, while the second has the Array(Uint16) type.
5564

5565
If the &#39;x&#39; value is equal to one of the elements in the &#39;array_from&#39; array, it returns the existing element (that is numbered the same) from the &#39;array_to&#39; array. Otherwise, it returns &#39;default&#39;. If there are multiple matching elements in &#39;array_from&#39;, it returns one of the matches.
5566

5567
Example:
5568

5569
%%
5570 5571 5572 5573 5574 5575 5576 5577 5578 5579 5580 5581 5582 5583

SELECT
    transform(SearchEngineID, [2, 3], [&#39;Yandex&#39;, &#39;Google&#39;], &#39;Others&#39;) AS title,
    count() AS c
FROM test.hits
WHERE SearchEngineID != 0
GROUP BY title
ORDER BY c DESC

┌─title──┬──────c─┐
│ Yandex │ 498635 │
│ Google │ 229872 │
│ Others │ 104472 │
└────────┴────────┘
5584
%%
5585

5586
2. %%transform(x, array_from, array_to)%%
5587

5588 5589
Differs from the first variation in that the &#39;default&#39; argument is omitted.
If the &#39;x&#39; value is equal to one of the elements in the &#39;array_from&#39; array, it returns the matching element (that is numbered the same) from the &#39;array_to&#39; array. Otherwise, it returns &#39;x&#39;.
5590

5591 5592
Types:
<span class="inline-example">transform(T, Array(T), Array(T)) -> T</span>
5593

5594
Example:
5595

5596
%%
5597 5598 5599 5600 5601 5602 5603 5604 5605 5606 5607 5608 5609 5610 5611 5612 5613 5614 5615 5616 5617

SELECT
    transform(domain(Referer), [&#39;yandex.ru&#39;, &#39;google.ru&#39;, &#39;vk.com&#39;], [&#39;www.yandex&#39;, &#39;ввв.яндекс.рф&#39;, &#39;example.com&#39;]) AS s,
    count() AS c
FROM test.hits
GROUP BY domain(Referer)
ORDER BY count() DESC
LIMIT 10

┌─s──────────────┬───────c─┐
│                │ 2906259 │
│ www.yandex     │  867767 │
│ ███████.ru     │  313599 │
│ mail.yandex.ru │  107147 │
│ ввв.яндекс.рф  │  105668 │
│ ██████.ru      │  100355 │
│ █████████.ru   │   65040 │
│ news.yandex.ru │   64515 │
│ ██████.net     │   59141 │
│ example.com    │   57316 │
└────────────────┴─────────┘
5618
%%
5619 5620


5621
==arrayJoin function==
5622

5623
This is a very unusual function.
5624

5625 5626
Normal functions don&#39;t change a set of rows, but just change the values in each row (map). Aggregate functions compress a set of rows (fold or reduce).
The &#39;arrayJoin&#39; function takes each row and generates a set of rows (unfold).
5627

5628 5629
This function takes an array as an argument, and propagates the source row to multiple rows for the number of elements in the array.
All the values in columns are simply copied, except the values in the column where this function is applied - it is replaced with the corresponding array value.
5630

5631
A query can use multiple &#39;arrayJoin&#39; functions. In this case, the transformation is performed multiple times.
5632

5633
Note the ARRAY JOIN syntax in the SELECT query, which provides broader possibilities.
5634

5635
Example:
5636

5637
%%
5638 5639 5640 5641 5642 5643 5644 5645 5646 5647 5648 5649
:) SELECT arrayJoin([1, 2, 3] AS src) AS dst, &#39;Hello&#39;, src

SELECT
    arrayJoin([1, 2, 3] AS src) AS dst,
    &#39;Hello&#39;,
    src

┌─dst─┬─\&#39;Hello\&#39;─┬─src─────┐
│   1 │ Hello     │ [1,2,3] │
│   2 │ Hello     │ [1,2,3] │
│   3 │ Hello     │ [1,2,3] │
└─────┴───────────┴─────────┘
5650
%%
5651 5652

</div>
5653
<div class="island">
5654 5655
<h1>Aggregate functions</h1>
</div>
5656
<div class="island content">
5657

5658
==count()==
5659

5660 5661
Counts the number of rows. Accepts zero arguments and returns UInt64.
The syntax COUNT(DISTINCT x) is not supported. The separate &#39;uniq&#39; aggregate function exists for this purpose.
5662

5663
A &#39;SELECT count() FROM table&#39; query is not optimized, because the number of entries in the table is not stored separately. It will select some small column from the table and count the number of values in it.
5664 5665


5666
==any(x)==
5667

5668
Selects the first encountered value.
5669
The query can be executed in any order and even in a different order each time, so the result of this function is indeterminate.
5670
To get a determinate result, you can use the &#39;min&#39; or &#39;max&#39; function instead of &#39;any&#39;.
5671

5672
In some cases, you can rely on the order of execution. This applies to cases when SELECT comes from a subquery that uses ORDER BY.
5673

5674
When a SELECT query has the GROUP BY clause or at least one aggregate function, ClickHouse (in contrast to MySQL) requires that all expressions in the SELECT, HAVING, and ORDER BY clauses be calculated from keys or from aggregate functions. That is, each column selected from the table must be used either in keys, or inside aggregate functions. To get behavior like in MySQL, you can put the other columns in the &#39;any&#39; aggregate function.
5675 5676


5677
==anyLast(x)==
5678

5679 5680
Selects the last value encountered.
The result is just as indeterminate as for the &#39;any&#39; function.
5681 5682


5683
==min(x)==
5684

5685
Calculates the minimum.
5686 5687


5688
==max(x)==
5689

5690
Calculates the maximum.
5691 5692


5693
==argMin(arg, val)==
5694

5695
Calculates the &#39;arg&#39; value for a minimal &#39;val&#39; value. If there are several different values of &#39;arg&#39; for minimal values of &#39;val&#39;, the first of these values encountered is output.
5696 5697


5698
==argMax(arg, val)==
5699

5700
Calculates the &#39;arg&#39; value for a maximum &#39;val&#39; value. If there are several different values of &#39;arg&#39; for maximum values of &#39;val&#39;, the first of these values encountered is output.
5701 5702


5703
==sum(x)==
5704

5705 5706
Calculates the sum.
Only works for numbers.
5707 5708


5709
==avg(x)==
5710

5711
Calculates the average.
5712
Only works for numbers.
5713
The result is always Float64.
5714 5715


5716
==uniq(x)==
5717

5718
Calculates the approximate number of different values of the argument. Works for numbers, strings, dates, and dates with times.
5719

5720 5721
Uses an adaptive sampling algorithm: for the calculation state, it uses a sample of element hash values with a size up to 65535.
Compared with the widely known HyperLogLog algorithm, this algorithm is less effective in terms of accuracy and memory consumption (even up to proportionality), but it is adaptive. This means that with fairly high accuracy, it consumes less memory during simultaneous computation of cardinality for a large number of data sets whose cardinality has power law distribution (i.e. in cases when most of the data sets are small). This algorithm is also very accurate for data sets with small cardinality (up to 65536) and very efficient on CPU (when computing not too many of these functions, using &#39;uniq&#39; is almost as fast as using other aggregate functions).
5722

5723
There is no compensation for the bias of an estimate, so for large data sets the results are systematically deflated. This function is normally used for computing the number of unique visitors in Yandex.Metrica, so this bias does not play a role.
5724

5725
The result is determinate (it doesn&#39;t depend on the order of query execution).
5726 5727


5728
==uniqHLL12(x)==
5729

5730
Uses the HyperLogLog algorithm to approximate the number of different values of the argument. It uses 2<sup>12</sup> 5-bit cells. The size of the state is slightly more than 2.5 KB.
5731

5732
The result is determinate (it doesn&#39;t depend on the order of query execution).
5733

5734
In most cases, use the &#39;uniq&#39; function. You should only use this function if you understand its advantages well.
5735 5736


5737
==uniqExact(x)==
5738

5739
Calculates the number of different values of the argument, exactly.
5740
There is no reason to fear approximations, so it&#39;s better to use the &#39;uniq&#39; function.
5741
You should use the &#39;uniqExact&#39; function if you definitely need an exact result.
5742

5743
The &#39;uniqExact&#39; function uses more memory than the &#39;uniq&#39; function, because the size of the state has unbounded growth as the number of different values increases.
5744 5745


5746
==groupArray(x)==
5747

5748 5749
Creates an array of argument values.
Values can be added to the array in any (indeterminate) order.
5750

5751
In some cases, you can rely on the order of execution. This applies to cases when SELECT comes from a subquery that uses ORDER BY.
5752 5753


5754
==groupUniqArray(x)==
5755

5756
Creates an array from different argument values. Memory consumption is the same as for the &#39;uniqExact&#39; function.
5757 5758


5759
==median(x)==
5760

5761
Approximates the median. Also see the similar &#39;quantile&#39; function.
5762
Works for numbers, dates, and dates with times.
5763
For numbers it returns Float64, for dates - a date, and for dates with times - a date with time.
5764

5765
Uses reservoir sampling with a reservoir size up to 8192.
5766
If necessary, the result is output with linear approximation from the two neighboring values.
5767
This algorithm proved to be more practical than another well-known algorithm - QDigest.
5768

5769
The result depends on the order of running the query, and is nondeterministic.
5770 5771


5772
==medianTiming(x)==
5773

5774
Calculates the median with fixed accuracy.
5775
Works for numbers. Intended for calculating medians of page loading time in milliseconds.
5776
Also see the similar &#39;quantileTiming&#39; function.
5777

5778
If the value is greater than 30,000 (a page loading time of more than 30 seconds), the result is equated to 30,000.
5779
If the value is less than 1024, the calculation is exact.
5780
If the value is from 1025 to 29,000, the calculation is rounded to a multiple of 16.
5781

5782
In addition, if the total number of values passed to the aggregate function was less than 32, the calculation is exact.
5783

5784
When passing negative values to the function, the behavior is undefined.
5785

5786
The returned value has the Float32 type. If no values were passed to the function (when using &#39;medianTimingIf&#39; or &#39;quantileTimingIf&#39;), &#39;nan&#39; is returned. The purpose of this is to differentiate these instances from zeros. See the note on sorting NaNs in &quot;ORDER BY clause&quot;.
5787

5788
The result is determinate (it doesn&#39;t depend on the order of query execution).
5789

5790
For its purpose (calculating quantiles of page loading times), using this function is more effective and the result is more accurate than for the &#39;median/quantile&#39; function.
5791 5792


5793
==medianDeterministic(x, determinator)==
5794

5795
This function works similarly to the &#39;median&#39; function - it approximates the median. However, in contrast to &#39;median&#39;, the result is deterministic and does not depend on the order of query execution.
5796

5797
To achieve this, the function takes a second argument - the &quot;determinator&quot;. This is a number whose hash is used instead of a random number generator in the reservoir sampling algorithm. For the function to work correctly, the same determinator value should not occur too often. For the determinator, you can use an event ID, user ID, and so on.
5798

5799
Don&#39;t use this function for calculating timings. The &#39;medianTiming&#39;, &#39;quantileTiming&#39;, and &#39;quantilesTiming&#39; functions are better suited to this purpose.
5800 5801


5802
==medianTimingWeighted(x, weight)==
5803

5804 5805
Differs from the &#39;medianTiming&#39; function in that it has a second argument - &quot;weights&quot;. Weight is a non-negative integer.
The result is calculated as if the &#39;x&#39; value were passed &#39;weight&#39; number of times to the &#39;medianTiming&#39; function.
5806 5807


5808
==varSamp(x)==
5809

5810
Calculates the amount <span class="inline-example">Σ((x - x̅)<sup>2</sup>) / (n - 1)</span>, where &#39;n&#39; is the sample size and &#39;&#39; is the average value of &#39;x&#39;.
5811

5812
It represents an unbiased estimate of the variance of a random variable, if the values passed to the function are a sample of this random amount.
5813

5814
Returns Float64. If n &lt;= 1, it returns +∞.
5815 5816


5817
==varPop(x)==
5818

5819
Calculates the amount <span class="inline-example">Σ((x - x̅)<sup>2</sup>) / n</span>, where &#39;n&#39; is the sample size and &#39;&#39; is the average value of &#39;x&#39;.
5820

5821
In other words, dispersion for a set of values. Returns Float64.
5822 5823


5824
==stddevSamp(x)==
5825

5826
The result is equal to the square root of &#39;varSamp(x)&#39;.
5827 5828


5829
==stddevPop(x)==
5830

5831
The result is equal to the square root of &#39;varPop(x)&#39;.
5832 5833


5834
==covarSamp(x, y)==
5835

5836
Calculates the value of %%Σ((x - x̅)(y - y̅)) / (n - 1)%%.
5837

5838
Returns Float64. If n &lt;= 1, it returns +∞.
5839 5840


5841
==covarPop(x, y)==
5842

5843
Calculates the value of %%Σ((x - x̅)(y - y̅)) / n%%.
5844 5845


5846
==corr(x, y)==
5847

5848
Calculates the Pearson correlation coefficient: <span class="inline-example">Σ((x - x̅)(y - y̅)) / sqrt(Σ((x - x̅)<sup>2</sup>) * Σ((y - y̅)<sup>2</sup>))</span>.
5849 5850


5851
==Parametric aggregate functions==
5852

5853
Some aggregate functions can accept not only argument columns (used for compression), but a set of parameters - constants for initialization. The syntax is two pairs of brackets instead of one. The first is for parameters, and the second is for arguments.
5854 5855


5856
==quantile(level)(x)==
5857

5858 5859
Approximates the &#39;level&#39; quantile. &#39;level&#39; is a constant, a floating-point number from 0 to 1. We recommend using a &#39;level&#39; value in the range of 0.01 .. 0.99.
Don&#39;t use a &#39;level&#39; value equal to 0 or 1 - use the &#39;min&#39; and &#39;max&#39; functions for these cases.
5860

5861
The algorithm is the same as for the &#39;median&#39; function. Actually, &#39;quantile&#39; and &#39;median&#39; are internally the same function. You can use the &#39;quantile&#39; function without parameters - in this case, it calculates the median, and you can use the &#39;median&#39; function with parameters - in this case, it calculates the quantile of the set level.
5862

5863
When using multiple &#39;quantile&#39; and &#39;median&#39; functions with different levels in a query, the internal states are not combined (that is, the query works less efficiently than it could). In this case, use the &#39;quantiles&#39; function.
5864 5865


5866
==quantiles(level1, level2, ...)(x)==
5867

5868 5869
Approximates quantiles of all specified levels.
The result is an array containing the corresponding number of values.
5870 5871


5872
==quantileTiming(level)(x)==
5873

5874
Calculates the quantile of &#39;level&#39; using the same algorithm as the &#39;medianTiming&#39; function.
5875 5876


5877
==quantilesTiming(level1, level2, ...)(x)==
5878

5879
Calculates the quantiles of all specified levels using the same algorithm as the &#39;medianTiming&#39; function.
5880 5881


5882
==quantileTimingWeighted(level)(x, weight)==
5883

5884
Calculates the quantile of &#39;level&#39; using the same algorithm as the &#39;medianTimingWeighted&#39; function.
5885 5886


5887
==quantilesTimingWeighted(level1, level2, ...)(x, weight)==
5888

5889
Calculates the quantiles of all specified levels using the same algorithm as the &#39;medianTimingWeighted&#39; function.
5890 5891


5892
==quantileDeterministic(level)(x, determinator)==
5893

5894
Calculates the quantile of &#39;level&#39; using the same algorithm as the &#39;medianDeterministic&#39; function.
5895 5896


5897
==quantilesDeterministic(level1, level2, ...)(x, determinator)==
5898

5899
Calculates the quantiles of all specified levels using the same algorithm as the &#39;medianDeterministic&#39; function.
5900 5901


5902
==sequenceMatch(pattern)(time, cond1, cond2, ...)==
5903

5904
Pattern matching for event chains.
5905

5906
&#39;pattern&#39; is a string containing a pattern to match. The pattern is similar to a regular expression.
5907
&#39;time&#39; is the event time of the DateTime type.
5908
&#39;cond1, cond2 ...&#39; are from one to 32 arguments of the UInt8 type that indicate whether an event condition was met.
5909

5910 5911
The function collects a sequence of events in RAM. Then it checks whether this sequence matches the pattern.
It returns UInt8 - 0 if the pattern isn&#39;t matched, or 1 if it matches.
5912

5913 5914
Example: %%sequenceMatch(&#39;(?1).*(?2)&#39;)(EventTime, URL LIKE &#39;%company%&#39;, URL LIKE &#39;%cart%&#39;)%%
- whether there was a chain of events in which pages with the address in %%company%% were visited earlier than pages with the address in %%cart%%.
5915

5916 5917 5918
This is a degenerate example. You could write it using other aggregate functions:
%%minIf(EventTime, URL LIKE &#39;%company%&#39;) &lt; maxIf(EventTime, URL LIKE &#39;%cart%&#39;)%%.
However, there is no such solution for more complex situations.
5919

5920 5921 5922
Pattern syntax:
%%(?1)%% - Reference to a condition (any number in place of 1).
%%.*%% - Any number of events.
5923
<span class="inline-example">(?t>=1800)</span> - Time condition.
5924 5925
Any quantity of any type of events is allowed over the specified time.
The operators &lt;, >, &lt;= may be used instead of  >=.
5926
Any number may be specified in place of 1800.
5927

5928
Events that occur during the same second may be put in the chain in any order. This may affect the result of the function.
5929

5930
==uniqUpTo(N)(x)==
5931

5932 5933
Calculates the number of different argument values, if it is less than or equal to N.
If the number of different argument values is greater than N, it returns N + 1.
5934

5935
Recommended for use with small Ns, up to 10. The maximum N value is 100.
5936

5937 5938
For the state of an aggregate function, it uses the amount of memory equal to 1 + N * the size of one value of bytes.
For strings, it stores a non-cryptographic hash of 8 bytes. That is, the calculation is approximated for strings.
5939

5940
It works as fast as possible, except for cases when a large N value is used and the number of unique values is slightly less than N.
5941

5942
Usage example:
5943
Problem: Generate a report that shows only keywords that produced at least 5 unique users.
5944
Solution: Write in the query <span class="inline-example">GROUP BY SearchPhrase HAVING uniqUpTo(4)(UserID) >= 5</span>
5945 5946


5947
==Aggregate function combinators==
5948

5949 5950
The name of an aggregate function can have a suffix appended to it. This changes the way the aggregate function works.
There are %%If%% and %%Array%% combinators. See the sections below.
5951 5952


5953
==-If combinator. Conditional aggregate functions==
5954

5955
The suffix -%%If%% can be appended to the name of any aggregate function. In this case, the aggregate function accepts an extra argument - a condition (Uint8 type). The aggregate function processes only the rows that trigger the condition. If the condition was not triggered even once, it returns a default value (usually zeros or empty strings).
5956

5957
Examples: %%countIf(cond)%%, %%avgIf(x, cond)%%, %%quantilesTimingIf(level1, level2)(x, cond)%%, %%argMinIf(arg, val, cond)%% and so on.
5958

5959 5960
You can use aggregate functions to calculate aggregates for multiple conditions at once, without using subqueries and JOINs.
For example, in Yandex.Metrica, we use conditional aggregate functions for implementing segment comparison functionality.
5961 5962


5963
==-Array combinator. Aggregate functions for array arguments==
5964

5965
The -%%Array%% suffix can be appended to any aggregate function. In this case, the aggregate function takes arguments of the &#39;Array(T)&#39; type (arrays) instead of &#39;T&#39; type arguments. If the aggregate function accepts multiple arguments, this must be arrays of equal lengths. When processing arrays, the aggregate function works like the original aggregate function across all array elements.
5966

5967 5968
Example 1: %%sumArray(arr)%% - Totals all the elements of all &#39;arr&#39; arrays. In this example, it could have been written more simply: %%sum(arraySum(arr))%%.
Example 2: %%uniqArray(arr)%% - Count the number of unique elements in all &#39;arr&#39; arrays. This could be done an easier way: %%uniq(arrayJoin(arr))%%, but it&#39;s not always possible to add &#39;arrayJoin&#39; to a query.
5969

5970
The -%%If%% and -%%Array%% combinators can be used together. However, &#39;Array&#39; must come first, then &#39;If&#39;. Examples: %%uniqArrayIf(arr, cond)%%,  %%quantilesTimingArrayIf(level1, level2)(arr, cond)%%. Due to this order, the &#39;cond&#39; argument can&#39;t be an array.
5971 5972


5973
==-State combinator==
5974

5975
==-Merge combinator==
5976 5977 5978


</div>
5979
<div class="island">
5980 5981
<h1>Dictionaries</h1>
</div>
5982
<div class="island content">
5983

5984
A dictionary is a mapping (key -> attributes) that can be used in a query as functions. You can think of this as a more convenient and efficient type of JOIN with dimension tables.
5985

5986
There are built-in (internal) and add-on (external) dictionaries.
5987

5988
==Internal dictionaries==
5989

5990
ClickHouse contains a built-in feature for working with a geobase.
5991

5992
This allows you to:
5993 5994 5995
- Use a region&#39;s ID to get its name in the desired language.
- Use a region&#39;s ID to get the ID of a city, area, federal district, country, or continent.
- Check whether a region is part of another region.
5996
- Get a chain of parent regions.
5997

5998
All the functions support &quot;translocality,&quot; the ability to simultaneously use different perspectives on region ownership. For more information, see the section &quot;Functions for working with Yandex.Metrica dictionaries&quot;.
5999

6000 6001
The internal dictionaries are disabled in the default package.
To enable them, uncomment the parameters &#39;path_to_regions_hierarchy_file&#39; and &#39;path_to_regions_names_files&#39; in the server config file.
6002

6003
The geobase is loaded from text files.
6004
If you are Yandex employee, to create them, use the following instructions:
6005
https://github.yandex-team.ru/raw/Metrika/ClickHouse_private/master/doc/create_embedded_geobase_dictionaries.txt
6006

6007
Put the regions_hierarchy*.txt files in the path_to_regions_hierarchy_file directory. This configuration parameter must contain the path to the regions_hierarchy.txt file (the default regional hierarchy), and the other files (regions_hierarchy_ua.txt) must be located in the same directory.
6008

6009
Put the regions_names_*.txt files in the path_to_regions_names_files directory.
6010

6011
You can also create these files yourself. The file format is as follows:
6012

6013
regions_hierarchy*.txt: TabSeparated (no header), columns:
6014 6015 6016
- Region ID (UInt32)
- Parent region ID (UInt32)
- Region type (UInt8): 1 - continent, 3 - country, 4 - federal district, 5 - region, 6 - city; other types don&#39;t have values.
6017
- Population (UInt32) - Optional column.
6018

6019
regions_names_*.txt: TabSeparated (no header), columns:
6020
- Region ID (UInt32)
6021
- Region name (String) - Can&#39;t contain tabs or line breaks, even escaped ones.
6022

6023
A flat array is used for storing in RAM. For this reason, IDs shouldn&#39;t be more than a million.
6024

6025
Dictionaries can be updated without the server restart. However, the set of available dictionaries is not updated. For updates, the file modification times are checked. If a file has changed, the dictionary is updated.
6026
The interval to check for changes is configured in the &#39;builtin_dictionaries_reload_interval&#39; parameter.
6027
Dictionary updates (other than loading at first use) do not block queries. During updates, queries use the old versions of dictionaries. If an error occurs during an update, the error is written to the server log, while queries continue using the old version of dictionaries.
6028

6029
We recommend periodically updating the dictionaries with the geobase. During an update, generate new files and write them to a separate location. When everything is ready, rename them to the files used by the server.
6030

6031
There are also functions for working with OS identifiers and Yandex.Metrica search engines, but they shouldn&#39;t be used.
6032 6033


6034
==External dictionaries==
6035

6036 6037
It is possible to add your own dictionaries from various data sources. The data source for a dictionary can be a file in the local file system, the ClickHouse server, or a MySQL server.
A dictionary can be stored completely in RAM and updated regularly, or it can be partially cached in RAM and dynamically load missing values.
6038

6039 6040
The configuration of external dictionaries is in a separate file or files specified in the &#39;dictionaries_config&#39; configuration parameter.
This parameter contains the absolute or relative path to the file with the dictionary configuration. A relative path is relative to the directory with the server config file. The path can contain wildcards * and ?, in which case all matching files are found. Example: dictionaries/*.xml.
6041

6042
The dictionary configuration, as well as the set of files with the configuration, can be updated without restarting the server. The server checks updates every 5 seconds. This means that dictionaries can be enabled dynamically.
6043

6044
Dictionaries can be created when starting the server, or at first use. This is defined by the &#39;dictionaries_lazy_load&#39; parameter in the main server config file. This parameter is optional, &#39;true&#39; by default. If set to &#39;true&#39;, each dictionary is created at first use. If dictionary creation failed, the function that was using the dictionary throws an exception. If &#39;false&#39;, all dictionaries are created when the server starts, and if there is an error, the server shuts down.
6045

6046
The dictionary config file has the following format:
6047

6048
%%
6049 6050 6051 6052 6053 6054 6055 6056 6057 6058 6059 6060 6061 6062 6063 6064 6065 6066 6067 6068 6069 6070 6071 6072 6073 6074 6075 6076 6077 6078 6079 6080 6081 6082 6083 6084 6085 6086 6087 6088 6089 6090 6091 6092 6093 6094 6095 6096 6097 6098 6099 6100 6101 6102 6103 6104 6105 6106 6107 6108 6109 6110 6111 6112 6113 6114 6115 6116 6117 6118 6119 6120 6121 6122 6123 6124 6125 6126 6127 6128 6129 6130 6131 6132 6133 6134 6135 6136 6137 6138 6139 6140 6141 6142 6143 6144 6145 6146 6147 6148 6149
&lt;dictionaries>
	&lt;comment>Optional element with any content; completely ignored.&lt;/comment>

	&lt;!--You can set any number of different dictionaries. -->
	&lt;dictionary>
		&lt;!-- Dictionary name. The dictionary will be accessed for use by this name. -->
		&lt;name>os&lt;/name>

		&lt;!-- Data source. -->
		&lt;source>
			&lt;!-- Source is a file in the local file system. -->
			&lt;file>
				&lt;!-- Path on the local file system. -->
				&lt;path>/opt/dictionaries/os.tsv&lt;/path>
				&lt;!-- Which format to use for reading the file. -->
				&lt;format>TabSeparated&lt;/format>
			&lt;/file>

			&lt;!-- or the source is a table on a MySQL server.
			&lt;mysql>
				&lt;!- - These parameters can be specified outside (common for all replicas) or inside a specific replica - ->
				&lt;port>3306&lt;/port>
				&lt;user>metrika&lt;/user>
				&lt;password>qwerty&lt;/password>
				&lt;!- - Specify from one to any number of replicas for fault tolerance. - ->
				&lt;replica>
					&lt;host>example01-1&lt;/host>
					&lt;priority>1&lt;/priority> &lt;!- - The lower the value, the higher the priority. - ->
				&lt;/replica>
				&lt;replica>
					&lt;host>example01-2&lt;/host>
					&lt;priority>1&lt;/priority>
				&lt;/replica>
				&lt;db>conv_main&lt;/db>
				&lt;table>counters&lt;/table>
			&lt;/mysql>
			-->

			&lt;!-- or the source is a table on the ClickHouse server.
			&lt;clickhouse>
				&lt;host>example01-01-1&lt;/host>
				&lt;port>9000&lt;/port>
				&lt;user>default&lt;/user>
				&lt;password>&lt;/password>
				&lt;db>default&lt;/db>
				&lt;table>counters&lt;/table>
			&lt;/clickhouse>
			&lt;!- - If the address is similar to localhost, the request is made without network interaction. For fault tolerance, you can create a Distributed table on localhost and enter it. - ->
			-->
		&lt;/source>

		&lt;!-- Update interval for fully loaded dictionaries. 0 - never update. -->
		&lt;lifetime>
			&lt;min>300&lt;/min>
			&lt;max>360&lt;/max>
			&lt;!-- The update interval is selected uniformly randomly between min and max, in order to spread out the load when updating dictionaries on a large number of servers. -->
		&lt;/lifetime>

		&lt;!-- or &lt;!- - The update interval for fully loaded dictionaries or invalidation time for cached dictionaries. 0 - never update. - ->
		&lt;lifetime>300&lt;/lifetime>
		-->

		&lt;layout> &lt;!-- Method for storing in memory. -->
			&lt;flat />
			&lt;!-- or &lt;hashed />
			or
			&lt;cache>
				&lt;!- - Cache size in number of cells; rounded up to a degree of two. - ->
				&lt;size_in_cells>1000000000&lt;/size_in_cells>
			&lt;/cache> -->
		&lt;/layout>

		&lt;!-- Structure. -->
		&lt;structure>
			&lt;!-- Description of the column that serves as the dictionary identifier (key). -->
			&lt;id>
				&lt;!-- Column name with ID. -->
				&lt;name>Id&lt;/name>
			&lt;/id>

			&lt;attribute>
				&lt;!-- Column name. -->
				&lt;name>Name&lt;/name>
				&lt;!-- Column type. (How the column is understood when loading. For MySQL, a table can have TEXT, VARCHAR, and BLOB, but these are all loaded as String) -->
				&lt;type>String&lt;/type>
				&lt;!-- Value to use for a non-existing element. In the example, an empty string. -->
				&lt;null_value>&lt;/null_value>
			&lt;/attribute>
			&lt;!-- Any number of attributes can be specified. -->
			&lt;attribute>
				&lt;name>ParentID&lt;/name>
				&lt;type>UInt64&lt;/type>
				&lt;null_value>0&lt;/null_value>
				&lt;!-- Whether it defines a hierarchy - mapping to the parent ID (by default, false). -->
				&lt;hierarchical>true&lt;/hierarchical>
				&lt;!-- The mapping id -> attribute can be considered injective, in order to optimize GROUP BY. (by default, false) -->
				&lt;injective>true&lt;/injective>
			&lt;/attribute>
		&lt;/structure>
	&lt;/dictionary>
&lt;/dictionaries>
6150
%%
6151

6152
The dictionary identifier (key attribute) must be a number that fits into UInt64. Compound and string keys are not supported. However, if your dictionary has a complex key, you can hash it and use the hash as the key. You can use View for this purpose (in both ClickHouse and MySQL).
6153

6154
There are three ways to store dictionaries in memory.
6155

6156 6157
1. %%flat%% - As flat arrays.
This is the most effective method. It works if all keys are smaller than 500,000.  If a larger key is discovered when creating the dictionary, an exception is thrown and the dictionary is not created. The dictionary is loaded to RAM in its entirety. The dictionary uses the amount of memory proportional to maximum key value. With the limit of 500,000, memory consumption is not likely to be high. All types of sources are supported. When updating, data (from a file or from a table) is read in its entirety.
6158

6159
2. %%hashed%% - As hash tables.
6160
This method is slightly less effective than the first one. The dictionary is also loaded to RAM in its entirety, and can contain any number of items with any identifiers. In practice, it makes sense to use up to tens of millions of items, while there is enough RAM.
6161
All types of sources are supported. When updating, data (from a file or from a table) is read in its entirety.
6162

6163
3. %%cache%% - This is the least effective method. It is appropriate if the dictionary doesn&#39;t fit in RAM. It is a cache of a fixed number of cells, where frequently-used data can be located. MySQL and ClickHouse sources are supported, but file sources are not supported. When searching a dictionary, the cache is searched first. For each data block, all keys not found in the cache (or expired keys) are collected in a package, which is sent to the source with the query %%SELECT attrs... FROM db.table WHERE id IN (k1, k2, ...)%%. The received data is then written to the cache.
6164

6165
We recommend using the flat method when possible, or hashed. The speed of the dictionaries is impeccable with this type of memory storage.
6166

6167
Use the cache method only in cases when it is unavoidable. The speed of the cache depends strongly on correct settings and the usage scenario. A cache type dictionary only works normally for high enough hit rates (recommended 99% and higher). You can view the average hit rate in the system.dictionaries table. Set a large enough cache size. You will need to experiment to find the right number of cells - select a value, use a query to get the cache completely full, look at the memory consumption (this information is in the system.dictionaries table), then proportionally increase the number of cells so that a reasonable amount of memory is consumed. We recommend MySQL as the source for the cache, because ClickHouse doesn&#39;t handle requests with random reads very well.
6168

6169
In all cases, performance is better if you call the function for working with a dictionary after GROUP BY, and if the attribute being fetched is marked as injective. For a dictionary cache, performance improves if you call the function after LIMIT. To do this, you can use a subquery with LIMIT, and call the function with the dictionary from the outside.
6170

6171
An attribute is called injective if different attribute values correspond to different keys. So when GROUP BY uses a function that fetches an attribute value by the key, this function is automatically taken out of GROUP BY.
6172

6173 6174
When updating dictionaries from a file, first the file modification time is checked, and it is loaded only if the file has changed.
When updating from MySQL, for flat and hashed dictionaries, first a SHOW TABLE STATUS query is made, and the table update time is checked. If it is not NULL, it is compared to the stored time. This works for MyISAM tables, but for InnoDB tables the update time is unknown, so loading from InnoDB is performed on each update.
6175

6176
For cache dictionaries, the expiration (lifetime) of data in the cache can be set. If more time than &#39;lifetime&#39; has passed since loading the data in a cell, the cell&#39;s value is not used, and it is re-requested the next time it needs to be used.
6177

6178
If a dictionary couldn&#39;t be loaded even once, an attempt to use it throws an exception.
6179
If an error occurred during a request to a cached source, an exception is thrown.
6180
Dictionary updates (other than loading for first use) do not block queries. During updates, the old version of a dictionary is used. If an error occurs during an update, the error is written to the server log, and queries continue using the old version of dictionaries.
6181

6182
You can view the list of external dictionaries and their status in the system.dictionaries table.
6183

6184
To use external dictionaries, see the section &quot;Functions for working with external dictionaries&quot;.
6185

6186
Note that you can convert values for a small dictionary by specifying all the contents of the dictionary directly in a SELECT query (see the section &quot;transform function&quot;). This functionality is not related to external dictionaries.
6187 6188 6189


</div>
6190
<div class="island">
6191 6192
<h1>Settings</h1>
</div>
6193
<div class="island content">
6194

6195
In this section, we review settings that you can make using a SET query or in a config file. Remember that these settings can be set for a session or globally. Settings that can only be made in the server config file are not covered here.
6196 6197


6198
==max_block_size==
6199

6200
In ClickHouse, data is processed by blocks (sets of column parts). The internal processing cycles for a single block are efficient enough, but there are noticeable expenditures on each block. &#39;max_block_size&#39; is a recommendation for what size of block (in number of rows) to load from tables. The block size shouldn&#39;t be too small, so that the expenditures on each block are still noticeable, but not too large, so that the query with LIMIT that is completed after the first block is processed quickly, so that too much memory isn&#39;t consumed when extracting a large number of columns in multiple threads, and so that at least some cache locality is preserved.
6201

6202
By default, it is 65,536.
6203

6204
Blocks the size of &#39;max_block_size&#39; are not always loaded from the table. If it is obvious that less data needs to be retrieved, a smaller block is processed.
6205 6206


6207
==max_insert_block_size==
6208

6209
The size of blocks to form for insertion into a table.
6210 6211 6212
This setting only applies in cases when the server forms the blocks.
For example, for an INSERT via the HTTP interface, the server parses the data format and forms blocks of the specified size.
But when using clickhouse-client, the client parses the data itself, and the &#39;max_insert_block_size&#39; setting on the server doesn&#39;t affect the size of the inserted blocks.
6213
The setting also doesn&#39;t have a purpose when using INSERT SELECT, since data is inserted in the same blocks that are formed after SELECT.
6214

6215
By default, it is 1,048,576.
6216

6217
This is slightly more than &#39;max_block_size&#39;. The reason for this is because certain table engines (*MergeTree) form a data part on the disk for each inserted block, which is a fairly large entity. Similarly, *MergeTree tables sort data during insertion, and a large enough block size allows sorting more data in RAM.
6218 6219


6220
==max_threads==
6221

6222 6223
The maximum number of query processing threads
- excluding threads for retrieving data from remote servers (see the &#39;max_distributed_connections&#39; parameter).
6224

6225 6226
This parameter applies to threads that perform the same stages of the query execution pipeline in parallel.
For example, if reading from a table, evaluating expressions with functions, filtering with WHERE and pre-aggregating for GROUP BY can all be done in parallel using at least &#39;max_threads&#39; number of threads, then &#39;max_threads&#39; are used.
6227

6228
By default, 8.
6229

6230
If less than one SELECT query is normally run on a server at a time, set this parameter to a value slightly less than the actual number of processor cores.
6231

6232
For queries that are completed quickly because of a LIMIT, you can set a lower &#39;max_threads&#39;. For example, if the necessary number of entries are located in every block and max_threads = 8, 8 blocks are retrieved, although it would have been enough to read just one.
6233

6234
The smaller the &#39;max_threads&#39; value, the less memory is consumed.
6235 6236


6237
==max_compress_block_size==
6238

6239
The maximum size of blocks of uncompressed data before compressing for writing to a table. By default, 1,048,576 (1 MiB). If the size is reduced, the compression rate is significantly reduced, the compression and decompression speed increases slightly due to cache locality, and memory consumption is reduced. There usually isn&#39;t any reason to change this setting.
6240

6241
Don&#39;t confuse blocks for compression (a chunk of memory consisting of bytes) and blocks for query processing (a set of rows from a table).
6242 6243


6244
==min_compress_block_size==
6245

6246
For *MergeTree tables. In order to reduce latency when processing queries, a block is compressed when writing the next mark if its size is at least &#39;min_compress_block_size&#39;. By default, 65,536.
6247

6248
The actual size of the block, if the uncompressed data less than &#39;max_compress_block_size&#39; is no less than this value and no less than the volume of data for one mark.
6249

6250
Let&#39;s look at an example. Assume that &#39;index_granularity&#39; was set to 8192 during table creation.
6251

6252
We are writing a UInt32-type column (4 bytes per value). When writing 8192 rows, the total will be 32 KB of data. Since min_compress_block_size = 65,536, a compressed block will be formed for every two marks.
6253

6254
We are writing a URL column with the String type (average size of 60 bytes per value). When writing 8192 rows, the average will be slightly less than 500 KB of data. Since this is more than 65,536, a compressed block will be formed for each mark. In this case, when reading data from the disk in the range of a single mark, extra data won&#39;t be decompressed.
6255

6256
There usually isn&#39;t any reason to change this setting.
6257 6258


6259
==max_query_size==
6260

6261 6262
The maximum part of a query that can be taken to RAM for parsing with the SQL parser.
The INSERT query also contains data for INSERT that is processed by a separate stream parser (that consumes O(1) RAM), which is not included in this restriction.
6263

6264
By default, 64 KiB.
6265 6266


6267
==interactive_delay==
6268

6269 6270
The interval in microseconds for checking whether request execution has been canceled and sending the progress.
By default, 100,000 (check for canceling and send progress ten times per second).
6271 6272


6273 6274 6275
==connect_timeout==
==receive_timeout==
==send_timeout==
6276

6277 6278
Timeouts in seconds on the socket used for communicating with the client.
By default, 10, 300, 300.
6279 6280


6281
==poll_interval==
6282

6283 6284
Lock in a wait loop for the specified number of seconds.
By default, 10.
6285 6286


6287
==max_distributed_connections==
6288

6289
The maximum number of simultaneous connections with remote servers for distributed processing of a single query to a single Distributed table. We recommend setting a value no less than the number of servers in the cluster.
6290

6291
By default, 100.
6292 6293


6294
The following parameters are only used when creating Distributed tables (and when launching a server), so there is no reason to change them at runtime.
6295

6296
==distributed_connections_pool_size==
6297

6298
The maximum number of simultaneous connections with remote servers for distributed processing of all queries to a single Distributed table. We recommend setting a value no less than the number of servers in the cluster.
6299

6300
By default, 128.
6301 6302


6303
==connect_timeout_with_failover_ms==
6304

6305
The timeout in milliseconds for connecting to a remote server for a Distributed table engine, if the &#39;shard&#39; and &#39;replica&#39; sections are used in the cluster definition.
6306
If unsuccessful, several attempts are made to connect to various replicas.
6307
By default, 50.
6308 6309


6310
==connections_with_failover_max_tries==
6311

6312 6313
The maximum number of connection attempts with each replica, for the Distributed table engine.
By default, 3.
6314 6315


6316
==extremes==
6317

6318
Whether to count extreme values (the minimums and maximums in columns of a query result).
6319
Accepts 0 or 1. By default, 0 (disabled).
6320
For more information, see the section &quot;Extreme values&quot;.
6321 6322


6323
==use_uncompressed_cache==
6324

6325 6326
Whether to use a cache of uncompressed blocks. Accepts 0 or 1. By default, 0 (disabled).
The uncompressed cache (only for tables in the MergeTree family) allows significantly reducing latency and increasing throughput when working with a large number of short queries. Enable this setting for users who send frequent short requests. Also pay attention to the &#39;uncompressed_cache_size&#39; configuration parameter (only set in the config file) - the size of uncompressed cache blocks. By default, it is 8 GiB. The uncompressed cache is filled in as needed; the least-used data is automatically deleted.
6327

6328
For queries that read at least a somewhat large volume of data (one million rows or more), the uncompressed cache is disabled automatically in order to save space for truly small queries. So you can keep the &#39;use_uncompressed_cache&#39; setting always set to 1.
6329 6330


6331
==replace_running_query==
6332

6333 6334
When using the HTTP interface, the &#39;query_id&#39; parameter can be passed. This is any string that serves as the query identifier.
If a query from the same user with the same &#39;query_id&#39; already exists at this time, the behavior depends on the &#39;replace_running_query&#39; parameter.
6335

6336 6337
0 (default) - Throw an exception (don&#39;t allow the query to run if a query with the same &#39;query_id&#39; is already running).
1 - Cancel the old query and start running the new one.
6338

6339
Yandex.Metrica uses this parameter set to 1 for implementing suggestions for segmentation conditions. After entering the next character, if the old query hasn&#39;t finished yet, it should be canceled.
6340 6341


6342
==load_balancing==
6343

6344
Which replicas (among healthy replicas) to preferably send a query to (on the first attempt) for distributed processing.
6345

6346
<b>random</b> (default)
6347

6348 6349
The number of errors is counted for each replica. The query is sent to the replica with the fewest errors, and if there are several of these, to any one of them.
Disadvantages: Server proximity is not accounted for; if the replicas have different data, you will also get different data.
6350

6351
<b>nearest_hostname</b>
6352

6353
The number of errors is counted for each replica. Every 5 minutes, the number of errors is integrally divided by 2. Thus, the number of errors is calculated for a recent time with exponential smoothing. If there is one replica with a minimal number of errors (i.e. errors occurred recently on the other replicas), the query is sent to it. If there are multiple replicas with the same minimal number of errors, the query is sent to the replica with a host name that is most similar to the server&#39;s host name in the config file (for the number of different characters in identical positions, up to the minimum length of both host names).
6354

6355 6356
As an example, example01-01-1 and example01-01-2.yandex.ru are different in one position, while example01-01-1 and example01-02-2 differ in two places.
This method might seem a little stupid, but it doesn&#39;t use external data about network topology, and it doesn&#39;t compare IP addresses, which would be complicated for our IPv6 addresses.
6357

6358 6359
Thus, if there are equivalent replicas, the closest one by name is preferred.
We can also assume that when sending a query to the same server, in the absence of failures, a distributed query will also go to the same servers. So even if different data is placed on the replicas, the query will return mostly the same results.
6360

6361
<b>in_order</b>
6362

6363
Replicas are accessed in the same order as they are specified. The number of errors does not matter. This method is appropriate when you know exactly which replica is preferable.
6364 6365


6366
==totals_mode==
6367

6368 6369
How to calculate TOTALS when HAVING is present, as well as when max_rows_to_group_by and group_by_overflow_mode = &#39;any&#39; are present.
See the section &quot;WITH TOTALS modifier&quot;.
6370

6371
==totals_auto_threshold==
6372

6373 6374
The threshold for totals_mode = &#39;auto&#39;.
See the section &quot;WITH TOTALS modifier&quot;.
6375 6376


6377
==default_sample==
6378

6379
A floating-point number from 0 to 1. By default, 1.
6380 6381
Allows setting a default sampling coefficient for all SELECT queries.
(For tables that don&#39;t support sampling, an exception will be thrown.)
6382
If set to 1, default sampling is not performed.
6383 6384


6385
==Restrictions on query complexity==
6386

6387
Restrictions on query complexity are part of the settings.
6388 6389
They are used in order to provide safer execution from the user interface.
Almost all the restrictions only apply to SELECTs.
6390
For distributed query processing, restrictions are applied on each server separately.
6391

6392
Restrictions on the &quot;maximum amount of something&quot; can take the value 0, which means &quot;unrestricted&quot;.
6393 6394 6395 6396
Most restrictions also have an &#39;overflow_mode&#39; setting, meaning what to do when the limit is exceeded.
It can take one of two values: &#39;throw&#39; or &#39;break&#39;. Restrictions on aggregation (group_by_overflow_mode) also have the value &#39;any&#39;.
throw - Throw an exception (default).
break - Stop executing the query and return the partial result, as if the source data ran out.
6397
any (only for group_by_overflow_mode) - Continuing aggregation for the keys that got into the set, but don&#39;t add new keys to the set.
6398 6399


6400
===readonly===
6401

6402
If set to 1, run only queries that don&#39;t change data or settings.
6403
As an example, SELECT and SHOW queries are allowed, but INSERT and SET are forbidden.
6404
After you write %%SET readonly = 1%%, you can&#39;t disable readonly mode in the current session.
6405

6406
When using the GET method in the HTTP interface, &#39;readonly = 1&#39; is set automatically. In other words, for queries that modify data, you can only use the POST method. You can send the query itself either in the POST body, or in the URL parameter.
6407

6408
===max_memory_usage===
6409

6410
The maximum amount of memory consumption when running a query on a single server. By default, 10 GB.
6411

6412
The setting doesn&#39;t consider the volume of available memory or the total volume of memory on the machine.
6413 6414
The restriction applies to a single query within a single server.
You can use SHOW PROCESSLIST to see the current memory consumption for each query.
6415
In addition, the peak memory consumption is tracked for each query and written to the log.
6416

6417
Certain cases of memory consumption are not tracked:
6418
- Large constants (for example, a very long string constant).
6419
- The states of &#39;groupArray&#39; aggregate functions, and also &#39;quantile&#39; (it is tracked for &#39;quantileTiming&#39;).
6420

6421
Memory consumption is not fully considered for aggregate function states &#39;min&#39;, &#39;max&#39;, &#39;any&#39;, &#39;anyLast&#39;, &#39;argMin&#39;, and &#39;argMax&#39; from String and Array arguments.
6422 6423


6424
===max_rows_to_read===
6425

6426 6427
The following restrictions can be checked on each block (instead of on each row). That is, the restrictions can be broken a little.
When running a query in multiple threads, the following restrictions apply to each thread separately.
6428

6429
Maximum number of rows that can be read from a table when running a query.
6430

6431
===max_bytes_to_read===
6432

6433
Maximum number of bytes (uncompressed data) that can be read from a table when running a query.
6434

6435
===read_overflow_mode===
6436

6437
What to do when the volume of data read exceeds one of the limits: &#39;throw&#39; or &#39;break&#39;. By default, throw.
6438

6439
===max_rows_to_group_by===
6440

6441
Maximum number of unique keys received from aggregation. This setting lets you limit memory consumption when aggregating.
6442

6443
===group_by_overflow_mode===
6444

6445 6446
What to do when the number of unique keys for aggregation exceeds the limit: &#39;throw&#39;, &#39;break&#39;, or &#39;any&#39;. By default, throw.
Using the &#39;any&#39; value lets you run an approximation of GROUP BY. The quality of this approximation depends on the statistical nature of the data.
6447

6448
===max_rows_to_sort===
6449

6450
Maximum number of rows before sorting. This allows you to limit memory consumption when sorting.
6451

6452
===max_bytes_to_sort===
6453

6454
Maximum number of bytes before sorting.
6455

6456
===sort_overflow_mode===
6457

6458
What to do if the number of rows received before sorting exceeds one of the limits: &#39;throw&#39; or &#39;break&#39;. By default, throw.
6459

6460
===max_result_rows===
6461

6462
Limit on the number of rows in the result. Also checked for subqueries, and on remote servers when running parts of a distributed query.
6463

6464
===max_result_bytes===
6465

6466
Limit on the number of bytes in the result. The same as the previous setting.
6467

6468
===result_overflow_mode===
6469

6470 6471
What to do if the volume of the result exceeds one of the limits: &#39;throw&#39; or &#39;break&#39;. By default, throw.
Using &#39;break&#39; is similar to using LIMIT.
6472

6473
===max_execution_time===
6474

6475 6476
Maximum query execution time in seconds.
At this time, it is not checked for one of the sorting stages, or when merging and finalizing aggregate functions.
6477

6478
===timeout_overflow_mode===
6479

6480
What to do if the query is run longer than &#39;max_execution_time&#39;: &#39;throw&#39; or &#39;break&#39;. By default, throw.
6481

6482
===min_execution_speed===
6483

6484
Minimal execution speed in rows per second. Checked on every data block when &#39;timeout_before_checking_execution_speed&#39; expires. If the execution speed is lower, an exception is thrown.
6485

6486
===timeout_before_checking_execution_speed===
6487

6488
Checks that execution speed is not too slow (no less than &#39;min_execution_speed&#39;), after the specified time in seconds has expired.
6489

6490
===max_columns_to_read===
6491

6492
Maximum number of columns that can be read from a table in a single query. If a query requires reading a greater number of columns, it throws an exception.
6493

6494
===max_temporary_columns===
6495

6496
Maximum number of temporary columns that must be kept in RAM at the same time when running a query, including constant columns. If there are more temporary columns than this, it throws an exception.
6497

6498
===max_temporary_non_const_columns===
6499

6500 6501
The same thing as &#39;max_temporary_columns&#39;, but without counting constant columns.
Note that constant columns are formed fairly often when running a query, but they require approximately zero computing resources.
6502

6503
===max_subquery_depth===
6504

6505
Maximum nesting depth of subqueries. If subqueries are deeper, an exception is thrown. By default, 100.
6506

6507
===max_pipeline_depth===
6508

6509
Maximum pipeline depth. Corresponds to the number of transformations that each data block goes through during query processing. Counted within the limits of a single server. If the pipeline depth is greater, an exception is thrown. By default, 1000.
6510

6511
===max_ast_depth===
6512

6513
Maximum nesting depth of a query syntactic tree. If exceeded, an exception is thrown. At this time, it isn&#39;t checked during parsing, but only after parsing the query. That is, a syntactic tree that is too deep can be created during parsing, but the query will fail. By default, 1000.
6514

6515
===max_ast_elements===
6516

6517 6518
Maximum number of elements in a query syntactic tree. If exceeded, an exception is thrown.
In the same way as the previous setting, it is checked only after parsing the query. By default, 10,000.
6519

6520
===max_rows_in_set===
6521

6522
Maximum number of rows for a data set in the IN clause created from a subquery.
6523

6524
===max_bytes_in_set===
6525

6526
Maximum number of bytes (uncompressed data) used by a set in the IN clause created from a subquery.
6527

6528
===set_overflow_mode===
6529

6530
What to do when the amount of data exceeds one of the limits: &#39;throw&#39; or &#39;break&#39;. By default, throw.
6531

6532
===max_rows_in_distinct===
6533

6534
Maximum number of different rows when using DISTINCT.
6535

6536
===max_bytes_in_distinct===
6537

6538
Maximum number of bytes used by a hash table when using DISTINCT.
6539

6540
===distinct_overflow_mode===
6541

6542
What to do when the amount of data exceeds one of the limits: &#39;throw&#39; or &#39;break&#39;. By default, throw.
6543

6544
===max_rows_to_transfer===
6545

6546
Maximum number of rows that can be passed to a remote server or saved in a temporary table when using GLOBAL IN.
6547

6548
===max_bytes_to_transfer===
6549

6550
Maximum number of bytes (uncompressed data) that can be passed to a remote server or saved in a temporary table when using GLOBAL IN.
6551

6552
===transfer_overflow_mode===
6553

6554
What to do when the amount of data exceeds one of the limits: &#39;throw&#39; or &#39;break&#39;. By default, throw.
6555 6556


6557
==Settings profiles==
6558

6559 6560
A settings profile is a collection of settings grouped under the same name. Each ClickHouse user has a profile.
To apply all the settings in a profile, set &#39;profile&#39;. Example:
6561

6562
%%
6563
SET profile = &#39;web&#39;
6564
%%
6565

6566
- Load the &#39;web&#39; profile. That is, set all the options belonging to the &#39;web&#39; profile.
6567

6568 6569
Settings profiles are declared in the user config file. This is normally &#39;users.xml&#39;.
Example:
6570

6571
%%
6572 6573 6574 6575 6576 6577 6578 6579 6580 6581 6582 6583 6584 6585 6586 6587 6588 6589 6590 6591 6592 6593 6594 6595 6596 6597 6598 6599 6600 6601 6602
&lt;!-- Settings profiles. -->
&lt;profiles>
	&lt;!-- Default settings -->
	&lt;default>
		&lt;!-- Maximum number of threads for executing a single query. -->
		&lt;max_threads>8&lt;/max_threads>
	&lt;/default>
	&lt;!-- Settings for queries from the user interface -->
	&lt;web>
		&lt;max_rows_to_read>1000000000&lt;/max_rows_to_read>
		&lt;max_bytes_to_read>100000000000&lt;/max_bytes_to_read>
		&lt;max_rows_to_group_by>1000000&lt;/max_rows_to_group_by>
		&lt;group_by_overflow_mode>any&lt;/group_by_overflow_mode>
		&lt;max_rows_to_sort>1000000&lt;/max_rows_to_sort>
		&lt;max_bytes_to_sort>1000000000&lt;/max_bytes_to_sort>
		&lt;max_result_rows>100000&lt;/max_result_rows>
		&lt;max_result_bytes>100000000&lt;/max_result_bytes>
		&lt;result_overflow_mode>break&lt;/result_overflow_mode>
		&lt;max_execution_time>600&lt;/max_execution_time>
		&lt;min_execution_speed>1000000&lt;/min_execution_speed>
		&lt;timeout_before_checking_execution_speed>15&lt;/timeout_before_checking_execution_speed>
		&lt;max_columns_to_read>25&lt;/max_columns_to_read>
		&lt;max_temporary_columns>100&lt;/max_temporary_columns>
		&lt;max_temporary_non_const_columns>50&lt;/max_temporary_non_const_columns>
		&lt;max_subquery_depth>2&lt;/max_subquery_depth>
		&lt;max_pipeline_depth>25&lt;/max_pipeline_depth>
		&lt;max_ast_depth>50&lt;/max_ast_depth>
		&lt;max_ast_elements>100&lt;/max_ast_elements>
		&lt;readonly>1&lt;/readonly>
	&lt;/web>
&lt;/profiles>
6603
%%
6604

6605
In the example, two profiles are set: &#39;default&#39; and &#39;web&#39;. The &#39;default&#39; profile has a special purpose - it must always be present and is applied when starting the server. In other words, the &#39;default&#39; profile contains default settings. The &#39;web&#39; profile is a regular profile that can be set using the SET query or using a URL parameter in an HTTP query.
6606

6607
Settings profiles can inherit from each other. To use inheritance, indicate the &#39;profile&#39; setting before the other settings that are listed in the profile.
6608 6609

</div>
6610
<div class="island">
6611 6612
<h1>Configuration files</h1>
</div>
6613
<div class="island content">
6614

6615
The main server config file is &#39;config.xml&#39;. It resides in the /etc/clickhouse-server/ directory.
6616

6617
Certain settings can be overridden in the *.xml and *.conf files from the &#39;conf.d&#39; and &#39;config.d&#39; directories next to the config.
6618 6619 6620
The &#39;replace&#39; and &#39;remove&#39; attributes can be specified for the elements of these config files.
If neither is specified, it combines the contents of elements recursively, replacing values of duplicate children.
If &#39;replace&#39; is specified, it replaces the entire element with the specified one.
6621
If &#39;remove&#39; is specified, it deletes the element.
6622

6623
The config can also define &quot;substitutions&quot;. If an element has the &#39;incl&#39; attribute, the corresponding substitution from the file will be used as the value. By default, the path to the file with substitutions is &#39;/etc/metrika.xml&#39;. This can be changed in the config in the &#39;include_from&#39; element. The substitution values are specified in  &#39;/yandex/<i>substitution_name</i>&#39; elements of this file.
6624

6625
The &#39;config.xml&#39; file can specify a separate config with user settings, profiles, and quotas. The relative path to this config is set in the &#39;users_config&#39; element. By default, it is &#39;users.xml&#39;. If &#39;users_config&#39; is omitted, the user settings, profiles, and quotas are specified directly in &#39;config.xml&#39;. The server tracks changes to &#39;users_config&#39; and reloads it in runtime. That is, you can add or change users and their settings without relaunching the server.
6626

6627 6628 6629
For &#39;users.config&#39;, overrides and substitutions may also exist in files from the &#39;<i>users_config</i>.d&#39; directory (for example, &#39;users.d&#39;). Note that the server tracks updates only directly in the &#39;users.xml&#39; file, so all the possible overrides are not updated in runtime.

For each config file, the server also generates <i>file</i>-preprocessed.xml files on launch. These files contain all the completed substitutions and overrides, and they are intended for informational use. The server itself does not use these files, and you do not need to edit them.
6630 6631 6632


</div>
6633
<div class="island">
6634 6635
<h1>Access rights</h1>
</div>
6636
<div class="island content">
6637

6638
Users and access rights are set up in the user config. This is usually &#39;users.xml&#39;.
6639

6640
Users are recorded in the &#39;users&#39; section. Let&#39;s look at part of the &#39;users.xml&#39; file:
6641

6642
%%
6643 6644 6645 6646 6647 6648 6649 6650 6651 6652 6653 6654 6655 6656 6657 6658 6659 6660 6661 6662 6663 6664 6665 6666 6667 6668 6669 6670 6671 6672 6673 6674
&lt;!-- Users and ACL. -->
&lt;users>
	&lt;!-- If the username is not specified, the default user is used. -->
	&lt;default>
		&lt;!-- Password (in plaintext). May be empty. -->
		&lt;password>&lt;/password>

		&lt;!-- List of networks that access is allowed from. Each list item has one of the following forms:
			&lt;ip> IP address or subnet mask. For example, 222.111.222.3 or 10.0.0.1/8 or 2a02:6b8::3 or 2a02:6b8::3/64.
			&lt;host> Host name. Example: example01. A DNS query is made for verification, and all received address are compared to the client address.
			&lt;host_regexp> Regex for host names. For example, ^example\d\d-\d\d-\d\.yandex\.ru$
				A DNS PTR query is made to verify the client address and the regex is applied to the result.
				Then another DNS query is made for the result of the PTR query, and all received address are compared to the client address.
				We strongly recommend that the regex ends with \.yandex\.ru$. If you are installing ClickHouse independently, here you should specify:
			&lt;networks>
				&lt;ip>::/0&lt;/ip>
			&lt;/networks> -->

		&lt;networks incl=&quot;networks&quot; />
		&lt;!-- Settings profile for the user. -->
		&lt;profile>default&lt;/profile>
		&lt;!-- Quota for the user. -->
		&lt;quota>default&lt;/quota>
	&lt;/default>

	&lt;!-- For queries from the user interface. -->
	&lt;web>
		&lt;password>&lt;/password>
		&lt;networks incl=&quot;networks&quot; />
		&lt;profile>web&lt;/profile>
		&lt;quota>default&lt;/quota>
	&lt;/web>
6675
%%
6676

6677 6678
Here we can see that two users are declared: &#39;default&#39; and &#39;web&#39;. We added the &#39;web&#39; user ourselves.
The &#39;default&#39; user is chosen in cases when the username is not passed, so this user must be present in the config file. The &#39;default&#39; user is also used for distributed query processing - the system accesses remote servers under this username. So the &#39;default&#39; user must have an empty password and must not have substantial restrictions or quotas - otherwise, distributed queries will fail.
6679

6680
The password is specified in plain text directly in the config. In this regard, you should not consider these passwords as providing security against potential malicious attacks. Rather, they are necessary for protection from Yandex employees.
6681

6682
A list of networks is specified that access is allowed from. In this example, the list of networks for both users is loaded from a separate file (/etc/metrika.xml) containing the &#39;networks&#39; substitution. Here is a fragment of it:
6683

6684
%%
6685 6686 6687 6688 6689 6690 6691 6692 6693
&lt;yandex>
	...
	&lt;networks>
		&lt;ip>::/64&lt;/ip>
		&lt;ip>93.158.111.111/26&lt;/ip>
		&lt;ip>2a02:6b8:0:1::/64&lt;/ip>
	...
	&lt;/networks>
&lt;/yandex>
6694
%%
6695

6696
We could have defined this list of networks directly in &#39;users.xml&#39;, or in a file in the &#39;users.d&#39; directory (for more information, see the section &quot;Configuration files&quot;).
6697

6698
The config includes comments explaining how to open access from everywhere.
6699

6700
For use in production, only specify IP elements (IP addresses and their masks), since using &#39;host&#39; and &#39;hoost_regexp&#39; might cause extra latency.
6701

6702
Next the user settings profile is specified (see the section &quot;Settings profiles&quot;). You can specify the default profile, &#39;default&#39;. The profile can have any name. You can specify the same profile for different users. The most important thing you can write in the settings profile is &#39;readonly&#39; set to 1, which provides read-only access.
6703

6704
After this, the quota is defined (see the section &quot;Quotas&quot;). You can specify the default quota, &#39;default&#39;. It is set in the config by default so that it only counts resource usage, but does not restrict it. The quota can have any name. You can specify the same quota for different users - in this case, resource usage is calculated for each user individually.
6705 6706

</div>
6707
<div class="island">
6708 6709
<h1>Quotas</h1>
</div>
6710
<div class="island content">
6711

6712 6713
Quotas allow you to limit resource usage over a period of time, or simply track the use of resources.
Quotas are set up in the user config. This is usually &#39;users.xml&#39;.
6714

6715
The system also has a feature for limiting the complexity of a single query (see the section &quot;Restrictions on query complexity&quot;).
6716 6717
In contrast to query complexity restrictions, quotas:
- place restrictions on a set of queries that can be run over a period of time, instead of limiting a single query.
6718
- account for resources spent on all remote servers for distributed query processing.
6719

6720
Let&#39;s look at the section of the &#39;users.xml&#39; file that defines quotas.
6721

6722
%%
6723 6724 6725 6726 6727 6728 6729 6730 6731 6732 6733 6734 6735 6736 6737 6738 6739
&lt;!-- Quotas. -->
&lt;quotas>
	&lt;!-- Quota name. -->
	&lt;default>
		&lt;!-- Restrictions for a time period. You can set multiple time intervals with various restrictions. -->
		&lt;interval>
			&lt;!-- Length of time. -->
			&lt;duration>3600&lt;/duration>

			&lt;!-- No restrictions. Just collect data for the specified time interval. -->
			&lt;queries>0&lt;/queries>
			&lt;errors>0&lt;/errors>
			&lt;result_rows>0&lt;/result_rows>
			&lt;read_rows>0&lt;/read_rows>
			&lt;execution_time>0&lt;/execution_time>
		&lt;/interval>
	&lt;/default>
6740
%%
6741

6742
By default, the quota just tracks resource consumption for each hour, without limiting usage.
6743

6744
%%
6745 6746 6747 6748 6749 6750 6751 6752 6753 6754 6755 6756 6757 6758 6759 6760 6761 6762 6763 6764
&lt;statbox>
	&lt;!-- Restrictions for a time period. You can set multiple time intervals with various restrictions. -->
	&lt;interval>
		&lt;!-- Length of time.-->
		&lt;duration>3600&lt;/duration>
		&lt;queries>1000&lt;/queries>
		&lt;errors>100&lt;/errors>
		&lt;result_rows>1000000000&lt;/result_rows>
		&lt;read_rows>100000000000&lt;/read_rows>
		&lt;execution_time>900&lt;/execution_time>
	&lt;/interval>
	&lt;interval>
		&lt;duration>86400&lt;/duration>
		&lt;queries>10000&lt;/queries>
		&lt;errors>1000&lt;/errors>
		&lt;result_rows>5000000000&lt;/result_rows>
		&lt;read_rows>500000000000&lt;/read_rows>
		&lt;execution_time>7200&lt;/execution_time>
	&lt;/interval>
&lt;/statbox>
6765
%%
6766

6767
For the &#39;statbox&#39; quota, restrictions are set for every hour and for every 24 hours (86,400 seconds). The time interval is counted starting from an implementation-defined fixed moment in time. In other words, the 24-hour interval doesn&#39;t necessarily begin at midnight.
6768

6769
When the interval ends, all collected values are cleared. For the next hour, the quota calculation starts over.
6770

6771
Let&#39;s examine the amounts that can be restricted:
6772

6773
<b>queries</b> - The overall number of queries.
6774 6775 6776
<b>errors</b> - The number of queries that threw exceptions.
<b>result_rows</b> - The total number of rows output in results.
<b>read_rows</b> - The total number of source rows retrieved from tables for running a query, on all remote servers.
6777
<b>execution_time</b> - The total time of query execution, in seconds (wall time).
6778

6779
If the limit is exceeded for at least one time interval, an exception is thrown with a text about which restriction was exceeded, for which interval, and when the new interval begins (when queries can be sent again).
6780

6781
Quotas can use the &quot;quota key&quot; feature in order to report on resources for multiple keys independently. Here is an example of this:
6782

6783 6784 6785 6786 6787 6788 6789 6790 6791 6792
%%
&lt;!-- For the global report builder. -->
&lt;web_global>
	&lt;!-- keyed - the quota_key &quot;key&quot; is passed in the query parameter, and the quota is tracked separately for each key value.
	For example, you can pass a Metrica username as the key, so the quota will be counted separately for each username.
	Using keys makes sense only if quota_key is transmitted by the program, not by a user.
	You can also write &lt;keyed_by_ip /> so the IP address is used as the quota key.
	(But keep in mind that users can change the IPv6 address fairly easily.) -->
	&lt;keyed />
%%
6793

6794
The quota is assigned to users in the &#39;users&#39; section of the config. See the section &quot;Access rights&quot;.
6795

6796
For distributed query processing, the accumulated amounts are stored on the requestor server. So if the user goes to another server, the quota there will &quot;start over&quot;.
6797

6798
When the server is restarted, quotas are reset.
6799 6800 6801 6802

</div>


6803
<div class="informer">
6804 6805 6806 6807 6808 6809 6810
<!-- Yandex.Metrica informer -->
<a href="https://metrika.yandex.ru/stat/?id=18343495&amp;from=informer"
target="_blank" rel="nofollow"><img src="https://bs.yandex.ru/informer/18343495/2_1_FFFFFFFF_EFEFEFFF_0_pageviews"
style="width:80px; height:31px; border:0;" alt="Yandex.Metrica" title="Yandex.Metrica: data for today (pageviews)" onclick="try{Ya.Metrika.informer({i:this,id:18343495,type:0,lang:'ru'});return false}catch(e){}"/></a>
<!-- /Yandex.Metrica informer -->
</div>

6811
<script type="text/javascript">
6812

6813 6814 6815 6816 6817 6818 6819 6820 6821 6822 6823 6824 6825 6826 6827 6828 6829 6830 6831 6832 6833 6834 6835 6836 6837 6838 6839 6840 6841
// Генерация HTML по разметке, отдалённо напоминающей Wiki. Криво.
function wikiToHTML(text) {

	text = text.replace(/\n{0,2}===(.+?)===\n{0,2}/g, '\n\n<h3>$1<\/h3>\n\n');
	text = text.replace(/\n{0,2}==(.+?)==\n{0,2}/g, '\n\n<h2>$1<\/h2>\n\n');

	text = text.replace(/%%(.+?)%%/g, '<span class="inline-example">$1<\/span>');
	text = text.replace(/%%([\s\S]+?)%%/g, '<pre class="text-example">$1<\/pre>');

	text = text.replace(/(<pre[^>]*>)([\s\S]+?)(<\/pre>)/g, function(match, p1, p2, p3) {
		return p1 + p2.replace(/\n/g, '<newline>') + p3;
	});

	text = '<p>' + text + '<\/p>';
	text = text.replace(/\n(\s*\n)+/g, '<\/p><p>');

	text = text.replace(/(<pre[^>]*>)([\s\S]+?)(<\/pre>)/g, function(match, p1, p2, p3) {
		return p1 + p2.replace(/<newline>/g, '\n') + p3;
	});

	return text;
}

$('.content').each(function() {
	var elem = $(this);
	elem.html(wikiToHTML(elem.html()));
});


6842 6843 6844 6845 6846 6847 6848 6849 6850 6851 6852 6853 6854 6855 6856 6857 6858 6859 6860 6861 6862 6863 6864 6865 6866 6867 6868 6869 6870 6871 6872 6873 6874 6875 6876 6877 6878 6879 6880 6881 6882 6883 6884 6885 6886 6887 6888 6889 6890 6891 6892 6893 6894 6895 6896 6897 6898 6899 6900 6901 6902 6903 6904 6905 6906
$('.show-example').each(function() {
    var link = $("<a class='show-hide-link'>Show example<\/a>");
    var example = $(this);
    example.before(link);
    link.click(function() {
        example.toggle(100);
        link.text('Example:');
    });
});


// Создаём содержание.

var contents = [];
var set_of_anchors = {};

// Триграмный индекс текстов anchor-ов. Используется, чтобы расставить ссылки на разделы внутри текста.
var trigram_to_anchor = {};
var anchor_to_element = {};

function getTrigrams(s) {
	s = s.toLowerCase();

	var res = [];
	if (s.length < 3) {
		return;
	}

	for (var i = 0; i < s.length - 2; ++i) {
		res.push(s.substring(i, i + 3));
	}

	return res;
}

$('h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6').each(function() {
    var elem = $(this);
    var text = elem.text().replace(/^\d+\.\s+/, '');
    var anchor = text;
    var margin = elem.prop('tagName').substring(1) - 1;

    if (elem.hasClass('not-for-contents')) {
        return;
    }

    /// Снимает неоднозначность

    if (set_of_anchors[anchor] === undefined) {
        set_of_anchors[anchor] = 0;
    }

    ++set_of_anchors[anchor];

    if (set_of_anchors[anchor] > 1) {
        anchor += set_of_anchors[anchor];
    }

	var trigrams = getTrigrams(anchor);
	for (var i in trigrams) {
		if (trigram_to_anchor[trigrams[i]] === undefined) {
			trigram_to_anchor[trigrams[i]] = [];
		}
		trigram_to_anchor[trigrams[i]].push(anchor);
	}

6907
    elem.before($('<a href="#' + anchor + '" class="head-anchor" name="' + anchor + '">⚓<\/a>'));
6908

6909
    contents.push('<a href="#' + anchor + '" class="contents-element" style="margin-left:' + margin + 'em">' + text + '<\/a><br \/>');
6910 6911 6912 6913 6914 6915 6916 6917 6918 6919 6920 6921 6922 6923 6924 6925 6926 6927 6928 6929 6930 6931 6932 6933 6934 6935 6936 6937 6938 6939 6940 6941 6942 6943 6944 6945 6946 6947 6948 6949 6950 6951 6952 6953 6954 6955 6956 6957 6958 6959 6960 6961 6962 6963 6964 6965
});

$('#contents').html(contents.join(''));


// Найти по триграмному индексу лучший anchor для текста.
function findBestAnchor(s) {
	s = s.toLowerCase();
	var trigrams = getTrigrams(s);
	var anchors_score = {};

	for (var i in trigrams) {
		if (trigram_to_anchor.hasOwnProperty(trigrams[i])) {
			for (var j in trigram_to_anchor[trigrams[i]]) {
				if (anchors_score[trigram_to_anchor[trigrams[i]][j]] === undefined) {
					anchors_score[trigram_to_anchor[trigrams[i]][j]] = 0;
				}
				anchors_score[trigram_to_anchor[trigrams[i]][j]] += 1.0 / Math.sqrt(trigram_to_anchor[trigrams[i]][j].length);
			}
		}
	}

	var anchors_matched = [];
	for (var name in anchors_score) {
		anchors_matched.push({ name : name, score : anchors_score[name] });
	}

	anchors_matched.sort(function(a, b) { return b.score - a.score; });
//	console.log(anchors_matched);
	return anchors_matched[0].name;
}


$('p').each(function() {
    var elem = $(this);
    var text = elem.text();

    var match = text.match(/(?:разделе?|sections?|see(?: the)?) "([^"]+?)"/i);
    if (match) {
		elem.html(elem.html().replace(/((?:разделе?|sections?|see(?: the)?) ")([^"]+?)\d?(")/i, '$1<a href="#' + findBestAnchor(match[1]) + '">$2</a>$3'));
    }
});

// Если человек пришёл по ссылке с именем раздела в хэше, а этого раздела не существует, то найдём лучший раздел по триграмному индексу.
if (location.hash.length > 1) {
	var queried = decodeURIComponent(location.hash.substring(1));
	if (!set_of_anchors.hasOwnProperty(queried)) {
		location.hash = "#" + findBestAnchor(queried);
	}
}


</script>

    </body>
</html>