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---
slug: /en/sql-reference/table-functions/gcs
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sidebar_position: 70
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sidebar_label: gcs
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keywords: [gcs, bucket]
---
# gcs Table Function
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Provides a table-like interface to `SELECT` and `INSERT` data from [Google Cloud Storage ](https://cloud.google.com/storage/ ). Requires the [`Storage Object User` IAM role ](https://cloud.google.com/storage/docs/access-control/iam-roles ).
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This is an alias of the [s3 table function ](../../sql-reference/table-functions/s3.md ).
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If you have multiple replicas in your cluster, you can use the [s3Cluster function ](../../sql-reference/table-functions/s3Cluster.md ) (which works with GCS) instead to parallelize inserts.
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**Syntax**
``` sql
gcs(path [,hmac_key, hmac_secret] [,format] [,structure] [,compression])
```
:::tip GCS
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The GCS Table Function integrates with Google Cloud Storage by using the GCS XML API and HMAC keys. See the [Google interoperability docs ]( https://cloud.google.com/storage/docs/interoperability ) for more details about the endpoint and HMAC.
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:::
**Arguments**
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- `path` — Bucket url with path to file. Supports following wildcards in readonly mode: `*` , `**` , `?` , `{abc,def}` and `{N..M}` where `N` , `M` — numbers, `'abc'` , `'def'` — strings.
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:::note GCS
The GCS path is in this format as the endpoint for the Google XML API is different than the JSON API:
```
https://storage.googleapis.com/< bucket > /< folder > /< filename ( s ) >
```
and not ~~https://storage.cloud.google.com~~ .
:::
- `format` — The [format ](../../interfaces/formats.md#formats ) of the file.
- `structure` — Structure of the table. Format `'column1_name column1_type, column2_name column2_type, ...'` .
- `compression` — Parameter is optional. Supported values: `none` , `gzip/gz` , `brotli/br` , `xz/LZMA` , `zstd/zst` . By default, it will autodetect compression by file extension.
**Returned value**
A table with the specified structure for reading or writing data in the specified file.
**Examples**
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Selecting the first two rows from the table from GCS file `https://storage.googleapis.com/my-test-bucket-768/data.csv` :
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``` sql
SELECT *
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FROM gcs('https://storage.googleapis.com/my-test-bucket-768/data.csv', 'CSV', 'column1 UInt32, column2 UInt32, column3 UInt32')
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LIMIT 2;
```
``` text
┌─column1─┬─column2─┬─column3─┐
│ 1 │ 2 │ 3 │
│ 3 │ 2 │ 1 │
└─────────┴─────────┴─────────┘
```
The similar but from file with `gzip` compression:
``` sql
SELECT *
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FROM gcs('https://storage.googleapis.com/my-test-bucket-768/data.csv.gz', 'CSV', 'column1 UInt32, column2 UInt32, column3 UInt32', 'gzip')
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LIMIT 2;
```
``` text
┌─column1─┬─column2─┬─column3─┐
│ 1 │ 2 │ 3 │
│ 3 │ 2 │ 1 │
└─────────┴─────────┴─────────┘
```
## Usage
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Suppose that we have several files with following URIs on GCS:
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- 'https://storage.googleapis.com/my-test-bucket-768/some_prefix/some_file_1.csv'
- 'https://storage.googleapis.com/my-test-bucket-768/some_prefix/some_file_2.csv'
- 'https://storage.googleapis.com/my-test-bucket-768/some_prefix/some_file_3.csv'
- 'https://storage.googleapis.com/my-test-bucket-768/some_prefix/some_file_4.csv'
- 'https://storage.googleapis.com/my-test-bucket-768/another_prefix/some_file_1.csv'
- 'https://storage.googleapis.com/my-test-bucket-768/another_prefix/some_file_2.csv'
- 'https://storage.googleapis.com/my-test-bucket-768/another_prefix/some_file_3.csv'
- 'https://storage.googleapis.com/my-test-bucket-768/another_prefix/some_file_4.csv'
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Count the amount of rows in files ending with numbers from 1 to 3:
``` sql
SELECT count(*)
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FROM gcs('https://storage.googleapis.com/my-test-bucket-768/{some,another}_prefix/some_file_{1..3}.csv', 'CSV', 'name String, value UInt32')
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```
``` text
┌─count()─┐
│ 18 │
└─────────┘
```
Count the total amount of rows in all files in these two directories:
``` sql
SELECT count(*)
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FROM gcs('https://storage.googleapis.com/my-test-bucket-768/{some,another}_prefix/*', 'CSV', 'name String, value UInt32')
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```
``` text
┌─count()─┐
│ 24 │
└─────────┘
```
:::warning
If your listing of files contains number ranges with leading zeros, use the construction with braces for each digit separately or use `?` .
:::
Count the total amount of rows in files named `file-000.csv` , `file-001.csv` , … , `file-999.csv` :
``` sql
SELECT count(*)
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FROM gcs('https://storage.googleapis.com/my-test-bucket-768/big_prefix/file-{000..999}.csv', 'CSV', 'name String, value UInt32');
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```
``` text
┌─count()─┐
│ 12 │
└─────────┘
```
Insert data into file `test-data.csv.gz` :
``` sql
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INSERT INTO FUNCTION gcs('https://storage.googleapis.com/my-test-bucket-768/test-data.csv.gz', 'CSV', 'name String, value UInt32', 'gzip')
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VALUES ('test-data', 1), ('test-data-2', 2);
```
Insert data into file `test-data.csv.gz` from existing table:
``` sql
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INSERT INTO FUNCTION gcs('https://storage.googleapis.com/my-test-bucket-768/test-data.csv.gz', 'CSV', 'name String, value UInt32', 'gzip')
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SELECT name, value FROM existing_table;
```
Glob ** can be used for recursive directory traversal. Consider the below example, it will fetch all files from `my-test-bucket-768` directory recursively:
``` sql
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SELECT * FROM gcs('https://storage.googleapis.com/my-test-bucket-768/* *', 'CSV', 'name String, value UInt32', 'gzip');
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```
The below get data from all `test-data.csv.gz` files from any folder inside `my-test-bucket` directory recursively:
``` sql
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SELECT * FROM gcs('https://storage.googleapis.com/my-test-bucket-768/* */test-data.csv.gz', 'CSV', 'name String, value UInt32', 'gzip');
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```
## Partitioned Write
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If you specify `PARTITION BY` expression when inserting data into `GCS` table, a separate file is created for each partition value. Splitting the data into separate files helps to improve reading operations efficiency.
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**Examples**
1. Using partition ID in a key creates separate files:
```sql
INSERT INTO TABLE FUNCTION
gcs('http://bucket.amazonaws.com/my_bucket/file_{_partition_id}.csv', 'CSV', 'a String, b UInt32, c UInt32')
PARTITION BY a VALUES ('x', 2, 3), ('x', 4, 5), ('y', 11, 12), ('y', 13, 14), ('z', 21, 22), ('z', 23, 24);
```
As a result, the data is written into three files: `file_x.csv` , `file_y.csv` , and `file_z.csv` .
2. Using partition ID in a bucket name creates files in different buckets:
```sql
INSERT INTO TABLE FUNCTION
gcs('http://bucket.amazonaws.com/my_bucket_{_partition_id}/file.csv', 'CSV', 'a UInt32, b UInt32, c UInt32')
PARTITION BY a VALUES (1, 2, 3), (1, 4, 5), (10, 11, 12), (10, 13, 14), (20, 21, 22), (20, 23, 24);
```
As a result, the data is written into three files in different buckets: `my_bucket_1/file.csv` , `my_bucket_10/file.csv` , and `my_bucket_20/file.csv` .
**See Also**
- [S3 table function ](s3.md )
- [S3 engine ](../../engines/table-engines/integrations/s3.md )