--- slug: /en/engines/table-functions/executable sidebar_position: 50 sidebar_label: executable keywords: [udf, user defined function, clickhouse, executable, table, function] --- # executable Table Function for UDFs The `executable` table function creates a table based on the output of a user-defined function (UDF) that you define in a script that outputs rows to **stdout**. The executable script is stored in the `users_scripts` directory and can read data from any source. You can optionally include one or more input queries that stream their results to **stdin** for the script to read. :::note A key advantage between ordinary UDF functions and the `executable` table function and `Executable` table engine is that ordinary UDF functions cannot change the row count. For example, if the input is 100 rows, then the result must return 100 rows. When using the `executable` table function or `Executable` table engine, your script can make any data transformations you want, including complex aggregations. ::: ## Syntax The `executable` table function requires three parameters and accepts an optional list of input queries: ```sql executable(script_name, format, structure, [input_query...] [,SETTINGS ...]) ``` - `script_name`: the file name of the script. saved in the `user_scripts` folder (the default folder of the `user_scripts_path` setting) - `format`: the format of the generated table - `structure`: the table schema of the generated table - `input_query`: an optional query (or collection or queries) whose results are passed to the script via **stdin** :::note If you are going to invoke the same script repeatedly with the same input queries, consider using the [`Executable` table engine](../../engines/table-engines/special/executable.md). ::: The following Python script is named `generate_random.py` and is saved in the `user_scripts` folder. It reads in a number `i` and prints `i` random strings, with each string preceded by a number that is separated by a tab: ```python #!/usr/local/bin/python3.9 import sys import string import random def main(): # Read input value for number in sys.stdin: i = int(number) # Generate some random rows for id in range(0, i): letters = string.ascii_letters random_string = ''.join(random.choices(letters ,k=10)) print(str(id) + '\t' + random_string + '\n', end='') # Flush results to stdout sys.stdout.flush() if __name__ == "__main__": main() ``` Let's invoke the script and have it generate 10 random strings: ```sql SELECT * FROM executable('my_script.py', TabSeparated, 'id UInt32, random String', (SELECT 10)) ``` The response looks like: ```response ┌─id─┬─random─────┐ │ 0 │ xheXXCiSkH │ │ 1 │ AqxvHAoTrl │ │ 2 │ JYvPCEbIkY │ │ 3 │ sWgnqJwGRm │ │ 4 │ fTZGrjcLon │ │ 5 │ ZQINGktPnd │ │ 6 │ YFSvGGoezb │ │ 7 │ QyMJJZOOia │ │ 8 │ NfiyDDhmcI │ │ 9 │ REJRdJpWrg │ └────┴────────────┘ ``` ## Settings - `send_chunk_header` - controls whether to send row count before sending a chunk of data to process. Default value is `false`. - `pool_size` — Size of pool. If 0 is specified as `pool_size` then there is no pool size restrictions. Default value is `16`. - `max_command_execution_time` — Maximum executable script command execution time for processing block of data. Specified in seconds. Default value is 10. - `command_termination_timeout` — executable script should contain main read-write loop. After table function is destroyed, pipe is closed, and executable file will have `command_termination_timeout` seconds to shutdown, before ClickHouse will send SIGTERM signal to child process. Specified in seconds. Default value is 10. - `command_read_timeout` - timeout for reading data from command stdout in milliseconds. Default value 10000. - `command_write_timeout` - timeout for writing data to command stdin in milliseconds. Default value 10000. ## Passing Query Results to a Script Be sure to check out the example in the `Executable` table engine on [how to pass query results to a script](../../engines/table-engines/special/executable.md#passing-query-results-to-a-script). Here is how you execute the same script in that example using the `executable` table function: ```sql SELECT * FROM executable( 'sentiment.py', TabSeparated, 'id UInt64, sentiment Float32', (SELECT id, comment FROM hackernews WHERE id > 0 AND comment != '' LIMIT 20) ); ```