--- toc_priority: 52 toc_title: System Tables --- # System Tables {#system-tables} ## Introduction {#system-tables-introduction} System tables provide information about: - Server states, processes, and environment. - Server’s internal processes. System tables: - Located in the `system` database. - Available only for reading data. - Can’t be dropped or altered, but can be detached. Most of system tables store their data in RAM. A ClickHouse server creates such system tables at the start. Unlike other system tables, the system tables [metric\_log](../../operations/system-tables/metric_log.md#system_tables-metric_log), [query\_log](../../operations/system-tables/query_log.md#system_tables-query_log), [query\_thread\_log](../../operations/system-tables/query_thread_log.md#system_tables-query_thread_log), [trace\_log](../../operations/system-tables/trace_log.md#system_tables-trace_log) are served by [MergeTree](../../engines/table-engines/mergetree-family/mergetree.md) table engine and store their data in a storage filesystem. If you remove a table from a filesystem, the ClickHouse server creates the empty one again at the time of the next data writing. If system table schema changed in a new release, then ClickHouse renames the current table and creates a new one. By default, table growth is unlimited. To control a size of a table, you can use [TTL](../../sql-reference/statements/alter/ttl.md#manipulations-with-table-ttl) settings for removing outdated log records. Also you can use the partitioning feature of `MergeTree`-engine tables. ## Sources of System Metrics {#system-tables-sources-of-system-metrics} For collecting system metrics ClickHouse server uses: - `CAP_NET_ADMIN` capability. - [procfs](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Procfs) (only in Linux). **procfs** If ClickHouse server doesn’t have `CAP_NET_ADMIN` capability, it tries to fall back to `ProcfsMetricsProvider`. `ProcfsMetricsProvider` allows collecting per-query system metrics (for CPU and I/O). If procfs is supported and enabled on the system, ClickHouse server collects these metrics: - `OSCPUVirtualTimeMicroseconds` - `OSCPUWaitMicroseconds` - `OSIOWaitMicroseconds` - `OSReadChars` - `OSWriteChars` - `OSReadBytes` - `OSWriteBytes` [Original article](https://clickhouse.tech/docs/en/operations/system-tables/)