--- slug: /en/engines/table-engines/integrations/mysql sidebar_position: 138 sidebar_label: MySQL --- # MySQL Table Engine The MySQL engine allows you to perform `SELECT` and `INSERT` queries on data that is stored on a remote MySQL server. ## Creating a Table {#creating-a-table} ``` sql CREATE TABLE [IF NOT EXISTS] [db.]table_name [ON CLUSTER cluster] ( name1 [type1] [DEFAULT|MATERIALIZED|ALIAS expr1] [TTL expr1], name2 [type2] [DEFAULT|MATERIALIZED|ALIAS expr2] [TTL expr2], ... ) ENGINE = MySQL({host:port, database, table, user, password[, replace_query, on_duplicate_clause] | named_collection[, option=value [,..]]}) SETTINGS [ connection_pool_size=16, ] [ connection_max_tries=3, ] [ connection_wait_timeout=5, ] [ connection_auto_close=true, ] [ connect_timeout=10, ] [ read_write_timeout=300 ] ; ``` See a detailed description of the [CREATE TABLE](../../../sql-reference/statements/create/table.md#create-table-query) query. The table structure can differ from the original MySQL table structure: - Column names should be the same as in the original MySQL table, but you can use just some of these columns and in any order. - Column types may differ from those in the original MySQL table. ClickHouse tries to [cast](../../../engines/database-engines/mysql.md#data_types-support) values to the ClickHouse data types. - The [external_table_functions_use_nulls](../../../operations/settings/settings.md#external-table-functions-use-nulls) setting defines how to handle Nullable columns. Default value: 1. If 0, the table function does not make Nullable columns and inserts default values instead of nulls. This is also applicable for NULL values inside arrays. :::note The MySQL Table Engine is currently not available on the ClickHouse builds for MacOS ([issue](https://github.com/ClickHouse/ClickHouse/issues/21191)) ::: **Engine Parameters** - `host:port` — MySQL server address. - `database` — Remote database name. - `table` — Remote table name. - `user` — MySQL user. - `password` — User password. - `replace_query` — Flag that converts `INSERT INTO` queries to `REPLACE INTO`. If `replace_query=1`, the query is substituted. - `on_duplicate_clause` — The `ON DUPLICATE KEY on_duplicate_clause` expression that is added to the `INSERT` query. Example: `INSERT INTO t (c1,c2) VALUES ('a', 2) ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE c2 = c2 + 1`, where `on_duplicate_clause` is `UPDATE c2 = c2 + 1`. See the [MySQL documentation](https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/8.0/en/insert-on-duplicate.html) to find which `on_duplicate_clause` you can use with the `ON DUPLICATE KEY` clause. To specify `on_duplicate_clause` you need to pass `0` to the `replace_query` parameter. If you simultaneously pass `replace_query = 1` and `on_duplicate_clause`, ClickHouse generates an exception. Arguments also can be passed using [named collections](/docs/en/operations/named-collections.md). In this case `host` and `port` should be specified separately. This approach is recommended for production environment. Simple `WHERE` clauses such as `=, !=, >, >=, <, <=` are executed on the MySQL server. The rest of the conditions and the `LIMIT` sampling constraint are executed in ClickHouse only after the query to MySQL finishes. Supports multiple replicas that must be listed by `|`. For example: ```sql CREATE TABLE test_replicas (id UInt32, name String, age UInt32, money UInt32) ENGINE = MySQL(`mysql{2|3|4}:3306`, 'clickhouse', 'test_replicas', 'root', 'clickhouse'); ``` ## Usage Example {#usage-example} Create table in MySQL: ``` text mysql> CREATE TABLE `test`.`test` ( -> `int_id` INT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, -> `int_nullable` INT NULL DEFAULT NULL, -> `float` FLOAT NOT NULL, -> `float_nullable` FLOAT NULL DEFAULT NULL, -> PRIMARY KEY (`int_id`)); Query OK, 0 rows affected (0,09 sec) mysql> insert into test (`int_id`, `float`) VALUES (1,2); Query OK, 1 row affected (0,00 sec) mysql> select * from test; +------+----------+-----+----------+ | int_id | int_nullable | float | float_nullable | +------+----------+-----+----------+ | 1 | NULL | 2 | NULL | +------+----------+-----+----------+ 1 row in set (0,00 sec) ``` Create table in ClickHouse using plain arguments: ``` sql CREATE TABLE mysql_table ( `float_nullable` Nullable(Float32), `int_id` Int32 ) ENGINE = MySQL('localhost:3306', 'test', 'test', 'bayonet', '123') ``` Or using [named collections](/docs/en/operations/named-collections.md): ```sql CREATE NAMED COLLECTION creds AS host = 'localhost', port = 3306, database = 'test', user = 'bayonet', password = '123'; CREATE TABLE mysql_table ( `float_nullable` Nullable(Float32), `int_id` Int32 ) ENGINE = MySQL(creds, table='test') ``` Retrieving data from MySQL table: ``` sql SELECT * FROM mysql_table ``` ``` text ┌─float_nullable─┬─int_id─┐ │ ᴺᵁᴸᴸ │ 1 │ └────────────────┴────────┘ ``` ## Settings {#mysql-settings} Default settings are not very efficient, since they do not even reuse connections. These settings allow you to increase the number of queries run by the server per second. ### connection_auto_close {#connection-auto-close} Allows to automatically close the connection after query execution, i.e. disable connection reuse. Possible values: - 1 — Auto-close connection is allowed, so the connection reuse is disabled - 0 — Auto-close connection is not allowed, so the connection reuse is enabled Default value: `1`. ### connection_max_tries {#connection-max-tries} Sets the number of retries for pool with failover. Possible values: - Positive integer. - 0 — There are no retries for pool with failover. Default value: `3`. ### connection_pool_size {#connection-pool-size} Size of connection pool (if all connections are in use, the query will wait until some connection will be freed). Possible values: - Positive integer. Default value: `16`. ### connection_wait_timeout {#connection-wait-timeout} Timeout (in seconds) for waiting for free connection (in case of there is already connection_pool_size active connections), 0 - do not wait. Possible values: - Positive integer. Default value: `5`. ### connect_timeout {#connect-timeout} Connect timeout (in seconds). Possible values: - Positive integer. Default value: `10`. ### read_write_timeout {#read-write-timeout} Read/write timeout (in seconds). Possible values: - Positive integer. Default value: `300`. ## See Also {#see-also} - [The mysql table function](../../../sql-reference/table-functions/mysql.md) - [Using MySQL as a dictionary source](../../../sql-reference/dictionaries/index.md#dictionary-sources#dicts-external_dicts_dict_sources-mysql)