--- slug: /en/interfaces/http sidebar_position: 19 sidebar_label: HTTP Interface --- # HTTP Interface The HTTP interface lets you use ClickHouse on any platform from any programming language in a form of REST API. The HTTP interface is more limited than the native interface, but it has better language support. By default, `clickhouse-server` listens for HTTP on port 8123 (this can be changed in the config). HTTPS can be enabled as well with port 8443 by default. If you make a `GET /` request without parameters, it returns 200 response code and the string which defined in [http_server_default_response](../operations/server-configuration-parameters/settings.md#server_configuration_parameters-http_server_default_response) default value “Ok.” (with a line feed at the end) ``` bash $ curl 'http://localhost:8123/' Ok. ``` Also see: [HTTP response codes caveats](#http_response_codes_caveats). Sometimes, `curl` command is not available on user operating systems. On Ubuntu or Debian, run `sudo apt install curl`. Please refer this [documentation](https://curl.se/download.html) to install it before running the examples. Web UI can be accessed here: `http://localhost:8123/play`. ![Web UI](../images/play.png) In health-check scripts use `GET /ping` request. This handler always returns “Ok.” (with a line feed at the end). Available from version 18.12.13. See also `/replicas_status` to check replica's delay. ``` bash $ curl 'http://localhost:8123/ping' Ok. $ curl 'http://localhost:8123/replicas_status' Ok. ``` Send the request as a URL ‘query’ parameter, or as a POST. Or send the beginning of the query in the ‘query’ parameter, and the rest in the POST (we’ll explain later why this is necessary). The size of the URL is limited to 1 MiB by default, this can be changed with the `http_max_uri_size` setting. If successful, you receive the 200 response code and the result in the response body. If an error occurs, you receive the 500 response code and an error description text in the response body. When using the GET method, ‘readonly’ 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. Examples: ``` bash $ curl 'http://localhost:8123/?query=SELECT%201' 1 $ wget -nv -O- 'http://localhost:8123/?query=SELECT 1' 1 $ echo -ne 'GET /?query=SELECT%201 HTTP/1.0\r\n\r\n' | nc localhost 8123 HTTP/1.0 200 OK Date: Wed, 27 Nov 2019 10:30:18 GMT Connection: Close Content-Type: text/tab-separated-values; charset=UTF-8 X-ClickHouse-Server-Display-Name: clickhouse.ru-central1.internal X-ClickHouse-Query-Id: 5abe861c-239c-467f-b955-8a201abb8b7f X-ClickHouse-Summary: {"read_rows":"0","read_bytes":"0","written_rows":"0","written_bytes":"0","total_rows_to_read":"0","elapsed_ns":"662334,"peak_memory_usage":"0"} 1 ``` As you can see, `curl` is somewhat inconvenient in that spaces must be URL escaped. Although `wget` escapes everything itself, we do not recommend using it because it does not work well over HTTP 1.1 when using keep-alive and Transfer-Encoding: chunked. ``` bash $ echo 'SELECT 1' | curl 'http://localhost:8123/' --data-binary @- 1 $ echo 'SELECT 1' | curl 'http://localhost:8123/?query=' --data-binary @- 1 $ echo '1' | curl 'http://localhost:8123/?query=SELECT' --data-binary @- 1 ``` If part of the query is sent in the parameter, and part in the POST, a line feed is inserted between these two data parts. Example (this won’t work): ``` bash $ echo 'ECT 1' | curl 'http://localhost:8123/?query=SEL' --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 ``` By default, data is returned in [TabSeparated](formats.md#tabseparated) format. You use the FORMAT clause of the query to request any other format. Also, you can use the ‘default_format’ URL parameter or the ‘X-ClickHouse-Format’ header to specify a default format other than TabSeparated. ``` bash $ echo 'SELECT 1 FORMAT Pretty' | curl 'http://localhost:8123/?' --data-binary @- ┏━━━┓ ┃ 1 ┃ ┡━━━┩ │ 1 │ └───┘ ``` 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. **Examples** Creating a table: ``` bash $ echo 'CREATE TABLE t (a UInt8) ENGINE = Memory' | curl 'http://localhost:8123/' --data-binary @- ``` Using the familiar INSERT query for data insertion: ``` bash $ echo 'INSERT INTO t VALUES (1),(2),(3)' | curl 'http://localhost:8123/' --data-binary @- ``` Data can be sent separately from the query: ``` bash $ echo '(4),(5),(6)' | curl 'http://localhost:8123/?query=INSERT%20INTO%20t%20VALUES' --data-binary @- ``` You can specify any data format. The ‘Values’ format is the same as what is used when writing INSERT INTO t VALUES: ``` bash $ echo '(7),(8),(9)' | curl 'http://localhost:8123/?query=INSERT%20INTO%20t%20FORMAT%20Values' --data-binary @- ``` To insert data from a tab-separated dump, specify the corresponding format: ``` bash $ echo -ne '10\n11\n12\n' | curl 'http://localhost:8123/?query=INSERT%20INTO%20t%20FORMAT%20TabSeparated' --data-binary @- ``` Reading the table contents. Data is output in random order due to parallel query processing: ``` bash $ curl 'http://localhost:8123/?query=SELECT%20a%20FROM%20t' 7 8 9 10 11 12 1 2 3 4 5 6 ``` Deleting the table. ``` bash $ echo 'DROP TABLE t' | curl 'http://localhost:8123/' --data-binary @- ``` For successful requests that do not return a data table, an empty response body is returned. ## Compression {#compression} You can use compression to reduce network traffic when transmitting a large amount of data or for creating dumps that are immediately compressed. You can use the internal ClickHouse compression format when transmitting data. The compressed data has a non-standard format, and you need `clickhouse-compressor` program to work with it. It is installed with the `clickhouse-client` package. To increase the efficiency of data insertion, you can disable server-side checksum verification by using the [http_native_compression_disable_checksumming_on_decompress](../operations/settings/settings.md#settings-http_native_compression_disable_checksumming_on_decompress) setting. If you specify `compress=1` in the URL, the server will compress the data it sends to you. If you specify `decompress=1` in the URL, the server will decompress the data which you pass in the `POST` method. You can also choose to use [HTTP compression](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HTTP_compression). ClickHouse supports the following [compression methods](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HTTP_compression#Content-Encoding_tokens): - `gzip` - `br` - `deflate` - `xz` - `zstd` - `lz4` - `bz2` - `snappy` To send a compressed `POST` request, append the request header `Content-Encoding: compression_method`. In order for ClickHouse to compress the response, enable compression with [enable_http_compression](../operations/settings/settings.md#settings-enable_http_compression) setting and append `Accept-Encoding: compression_method` header to the request. You can configure the data compression level in the [http_zlib_compression_level](../operations/settings/settings.md#settings-http_zlib_compression_level) setting for all compression methods. :::info Some HTTP clients might decompress data from the server by default (with `gzip` and `deflate`) and you might get decompressed data even if you use the compression settings correctly. ::: **Examples** ``` bash # Sending compressed data to the server $ echo "SELECT 1" | gzip -c | \ curl -sS --data-binary @- -H 'Content-Encoding: gzip' 'http://localhost:8123/' ``` ``` bash # Receiving compressed data archive from the server $ curl -vsS "http://localhost:8123/?enable_http_compression=1" \ -H 'Accept-Encoding: gzip' --output result.gz -d 'SELECT number FROM system.numbers LIMIT 3' $ zcat result.gz 0 1 2 ``` ```bash # Receiving compressed data from the server and using the gunzip to receive decompressed data $ curl -sS "http://localhost:8123/?enable_http_compression=1" \ -H 'Accept-Encoding: gzip' -d 'SELECT number FROM system.numbers LIMIT 3' | gunzip - 0 1 2 ``` ## Default Database {#default-database} You can use the ‘database’ URL parameter or the ‘X-ClickHouse-Database’ header to specify the default database. ``` bash $ echo 'SELECT number FROM numbers LIMIT 10' | curl 'http://localhost:8123/?database=system' --data-binary @- 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 ``` By default, the database that is registered in the server settings is used as the default database. By default, this is the database called ‘default’. Alternatively, you can always specify the database using a dot before the table name. The username and password can be indicated in one of three ways: 1. Using HTTP Basic Authentication. Example: ``` bash $ echo 'SELECT 1' | curl 'http://user:password@localhost:8123/' -d @- ``` 2. In the ‘user’ and ‘password’ URL parameters (*We do not recommend using this method as the parameter might be logged by web proxy and cached in the browser*). Example: ``` bash $ echo 'SELECT 1' | curl 'http://localhost:8123/?user=user&password=password' -d @- ``` 3. Using ‘X-ClickHouse-User’ and ‘X-ClickHouse-Key’ headers. Example: ``` bash $ echo 'SELECT 1' | curl -H 'X-ClickHouse-User: user' -H 'X-ClickHouse-Key: password' 'http://localhost:8123/' -d @- ``` If the user name is not specified, the `default` name is used. If the password is not specified, the empty password is used. You can also use the URL parameters to specify any settings for processing a single query or entire profiles of settings. Example:http://localhost:8123/?profile=web&max_rows_to_read=1000000000&query=SELECT+1 For more information, see the [Settings](../operations/settings/index.md) section. ``` bash $ echo 'SELECT number FROM system.numbers LIMIT 10' | curl 'http://localhost:8123/?' --data-binary @- 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 ``` For information about other parameters, see the section “SET”. Similarly, you can use ClickHouse sessions in the HTTP protocol. To do this, you need to add the `session_id` GET parameter to the request. You can use any string as the session ID. By default, the session is terminated after 60 seconds of inactivity. To change this timeout, modify the `default_session_timeout` setting in the server configuration, or add the `session_timeout` GET parameter to the request. To check the session status, use the `session_check=1` parameter. Only one query at a time can be executed within a single session. You can receive information about the progress of a query in `X-ClickHouse-Progress` response headers. To do this, enable [send_progress_in_http_headers](../operations/settings/settings.md#settings-send_progress_in_http_headers). Example of the header sequence: ``` text X-ClickHouse-Progress: {"read_rows":"2752512","read_bytes":"240570816","total_rows_to_read":"8880128","elapsed_ns":"662334","peak_memory_usage":"4371480"} X-ClickHouse-Progress: {"read_rows":"5439488","read_bytes":"482285394","total_rows_to_read":"8880128","elapsed_ns":"992334","peak_memory_usage":"13621616"} X-ClickHouse-Progress: {"read_rows":"8783786","read_bytes":"819092887","total_rows_to_read":"8880128","elapsed_ns":"1232334","peak_memory_usage":"23155600"} ``` Possible header fields: - `read_rows` — Number of rows read. - `read_bytes` — Volume of data read in bytes. - `total_rows_to_read` — Total number of rows to be read. - `written_rows` — Number of rows written. - `written_bytes` — Volume of data written in bytes. Running requests do not stop automatically if the HTTP connection is lost. Parsing and data formatting are performed on the server-side, and using the network might be ineffective. The optional ‘query_id’ parameter can be passed as the query ID (any string). For more information, see the section “Settings, replace_running_query”. The optional ‘quota_key’ parameter can be passed as the quota key (any string). For more information, see the section “Quotas”. The HTTP interface allows passing external data (external temporary tables) for querying. For more information, see the section “External data for query processing”. ## Response Buffering {#response-buffering} You can enable response buffering on the server-side. The `buffer_size` and `wait_end_of_query` URL parameters are provided for this purpose. Also settings `http_response_buffer_size` and `http_wait_end_of_query` can be used. `buffer_size` determines the number of bytes in the result to buffer in the server memory. If a result body is larger than this threshold, the buffer is written to the HTTP channel, and the remaining data is sent directly to the HTTP channel. To ensure that the entire response is buffered, set `wait_end_of_query=1`. In this case, the data that is not stored in memory will be buffered in a temporary server file. Example: ``` bash $ curl -sS 'http://localhost:8123/?max_result_bytes=4000000&buffer_size=3000000&wait_end_of_query=1' -d 'SELECT toUInt8(number) FROM system.numbers LIMIT 9000000 FORMAT RowBinary' ``` Use buffering to avoid situations where a query processing error occurred after the response code and HTTP headers were sent to the client. In this situation, an error message is written at the end of the response body, and on the client-side, the error can only be detected at the parsing stage. ## HTTP response codes caveats {#http_response_codes_caveats} Because of limitation of HTTP protocol, HTTP 200 response code does not guarantee that a query was successful. Here is an example: ``` curl -v -Ss "http://localhost:8123/?max_block_size=1&query=select+sleepEachRow(0.001),throwIf(number=2)from+numbers(5)" * Trying 127.0.0.1:8123... ... < HTTP/1.1 200 OK ... Code: 395. DB::Exception: Value passed to 'throwIf' function is non-zero: while executing 'FUNCTION throwIf(equals(number, 2) :: 1) -> throwIf(equals(number, 2)) ``` The reason for this behavior is the nature of the HTTP protocol. The HTTP header is sent first with an HTTP code of 200, followed by the HTTP body, and then the error is injected into the body as plain text. This behavior is independent of the format used, whether it's `Native`, `TSV`, or `JSON`; the error message will always be in the middle of the response stream. You can mitigate this problem by enabling `wait_end_of_query=1` ([Response Buffering](#response-buffering)). In this case, the sending of the HTTP header is delayed until the entire query is resolved. However, this does not completely solve the problem because the result must still fit within the `http_response_buffer_size`, and other settings like `send_progress_in_http_headers` can interfere with the delay of the header. The only way to catch all errors is to analyze the HTTP body before parsing it using the required format. ### Queries with Parameters {#cli-queries-with-parameters} You can create a query with parameters and pass values for them from the corresponding HTTP request parameters. For more information, see [Queries with Parameters for CLI](../interfaces/cli.md#cli-queries-with-parameters). ### Example {#example} ``` bash $ curl -sS "
?param_id=2¶m_phrase=test" -d "SELECT * FROM table WHERE int_column = {id:UInt8} and string_column = {phrase:String}" ``` ### Tabs in URL Parameters Query parameters are parsed from the "escaped" format. This has some benefits, such as the possibility to unambiguously parse nulls as `\N`. This means the tab character should be encoded as `\t` (or `\` and a tab). For example, the following contains an actual tab between `abc` and `123` and the input string is split into two values: ```bash curl -sS "http://localhost:8123" -d "SELECT splitByChar('\t', 'abc 123')" ``` ```response ['abc','123'] ``` However, if you try to encode an actual tab using `%09` in a URL parameter, it won't get parsed properly: ```bash curl -sS "http://localhost:8123?param_arg1=abc%09123" -d "SELECT splitByChar('\t', {arg1:String})" Code: 457. DB::Exception: Value abc 123 cannot be parsed as String for query parameter 'arg1' because it isn't parsed completely: only 3 of 7 bytes was parsed: abc. (BAD_QUERY_PARAMETER) (version 23.4.1.869 (official build)) ``` If you are using URL parameters, you will need to encode the `\t` as `%5C%09`. For example: ```bash curl -sS "http://localhost:8123?param_arg1=abc%5C%09123" -d "SELECT splitByChar('\t', {arg1:String})" ``` ```response ['abc','123'] ``` ## Predefined HTTP Interface {#predefined_http_interface} ClickHouse supports specific queries through the HTTP interface. For example, you can write data to a table as follows: ``` bash $ echo '(4),(5),(6)' | curl 'http://localhost:8123/?query=INSERT%20INTO%20t%20VALUES' --data-binary @- ``` ClickHouse also supports Predefined HTTP Interface which can help you more easily integrate with third-party tools like [Prometheus exporter](https://github.com/ClickHouse/clickhouse_exporter). Example: - First of all, add this section to server configuration file: ``` xml