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205 lines
8.9 KiB
Markdown
205 lines
8.9 KiB
Markdown
# What is ClickHouse? {#what-is-clickhouse}
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ClickHouse is a column-oriented database management system (DBMS) for
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online analytical processing of queries (OLAP).
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In a “normal” row-oriented DBMS, data is stored in this order:
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Row WatchID JavaEnable Title GoodEvent EventTime
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----- ------------- ------------ -------------------- ----------- ---------------------
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\#0 89354350662 1 Investor Relations 1 2016-05-18 05:19:20
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\#1 90329509958 0 Contact us 1 2016-05-18 08:10:20
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\#2 89953706054 1 Mission 1 2016-05-18 07:38:00
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\#N ... ... ... ... ...
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In other words, all the values related to a row are physically stored
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next to each other.
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Examples of a row-oriented DBMS are MySQL, Postgres, and MS SQL Server.
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{: .grey }
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In a column-oriented DBMS, data is stored like this:
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Row: \#0 \#1 \#2 \#N
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------------- --------------------- --------------------- --------------------- -----
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WatchID: 89354350662 90329509958 89953706054 ...
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JavaEnable: 1 0 1 ...
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Title: Investor Relations Contact us Mission ...
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GoodEvent: 1 1 1 ...
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EventTime: 2016-05-18 05:19:20 2016-05-18 08:10:20 2016-05-18 07:38:00 ...
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These examples only show the order that data is arranged in. The values
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from different columns are stored separately, and data from the same
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column is stored together.
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Examples of a column-oriented DBMS: Vertica, Paraccel (Actian Matrix and
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Amazon Redshift), Sybase IQ, Exasol, Infobright, InfiniDB, MonetDB
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(VectorWise and Actian Vector), LucidDB, SAP HANA, Google Dremel, Google
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PowerDrill, Druid, and kdb+. {: .grey }
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Different orders for storing data are better suited to different
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scenarios. The data access scenario refers to what queries are made, how
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often, and in what proportion; how much data is read for each type of
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query – rows, columns, and bytes; the relationship between reading and
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updating data; the working size of the data and how locally it is used;
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whether transactions are used, and how isolated they are; requirements
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for data replication and logical integrity; requirements for latency and
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throughput for each type of query, and so on.
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The higher the load on the system, the more important it is to customize
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the system set up to match the requirements of the usage scenario, and
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the more fine grained this customization becomes. There is no system
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that is equally well-suited to significantly different scenarios. If a
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system is adaptable to a wide set of scenarios, under a high load, the
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system will handle all the scenarios equally poorly, or will work well
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for just one or few of possible scenarios.
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## Key Properties of the OLAP scenario {#key-properties-of-the-olap-scenario}
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- The vast majority of requests are for read access.
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- Data is updated in fairly large batches (\> 1000 rows), not by
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single rows; or it is not updated at all.
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- Data is added to the DB but is not modified.
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- For reads, quite a large number of rows are extracted from the DB,
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but only a small subset of columns.
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- Tables are “wide,” meaning they contain a large number of columns.
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- Queries are relatively rare (usually hundreds of queries per server
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or less per second).
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- For simple queries, latencies around 50 ms are allowed.
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- Column values are fairly small: numbers and short strings (for
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example, 60 bytes per URL).
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- Requires high throughput when processing a single query (up to
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billions of rows per second per server).
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- Transactions are not necessary.
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- Low requirements for data consistency.
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- There is one large table per query. All tables are small, except for
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one.
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- A query result is significantly smaller than the source data. In
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other words, data is filtered or aggregated, so the result fits in a
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single server’s RAM.
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It is easy to see that the OLAP scenario is very different from other
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popular scenarios (such as OLTP or Key-Value access). So it doesn’t make
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sense to try to use OLTP or a Key-Value DB for processing analytical
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queries if you want to get decent performance. For example, if you try
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to use MongoDB or Redis for analytics, you will get very poor
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performance compared to OLAP databases.
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## Why Column-Oriented Databases Work Better in the OLAP Scenario {#why-column-oriented-databases-work-better-in-the-olap-scenario}
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Column-oriented databases are better suited to OLAP scenarios: they are
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at least 100 times faster in processing most queries. The reasons are
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explained in detail below, but the fact is easier to demonstrate
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visually:
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**Row-oriented DBMS**
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![Row-oriented](images/row_oriented.gif#)
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**Column-oriented DBMS**
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![Column-oriented](images/column_oriented.gif#)
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See the difference?
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### Input/output {#inputoutput}
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1. For an analytical query, only a small number of table columns need
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to be read. In a column-oriented database, you can read just the
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data you need. For example, if you need 5 columns out of 100, you
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can expect a 20-fold reduction in I/O.
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2. Since data is read in packets, it is easier to compress. Data in
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columns is also easier to compress. This further reduces the I/O
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volume.
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3. Due to the reduced I/O, more data fits in the system cache.
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For example, the query “count the number of records for each advertising
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platform” requires reading one “advertising platform ID” column, which
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takes up 1 byte uncompressed. If most of the traffic was not from
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advertising platforms, you can expect at least 10-fold compression of
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this column. When using a quick compression algorithm, data
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decompression is possible at a speed of at least several gigabytes of
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uncompressed data per second. In other words, this query can be
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processed at a speed of approximately several billion rows per second on
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a single server. This speed is actually achieved in practice.
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<details markdown="1">
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<summary>Example</summary>
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$ clickhouse-client
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ClickHouse client version 0.0.52053.
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Connecting to localhost:9000.
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Connected to ClickHouse server version 0.0.52053.
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:) SELECT CounterID, count() FROM hits GROUP BY CounterID ORDER BY count() DESC LIMIT 20
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SELECT
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CounterID,
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count()
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FROM hits
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GROUP BY CounterID
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ORDER BY count() DESC
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LIMIT 20
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┌─CounterID─┬──count()─┐
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│ 114208 │ 56057344 │
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│ 115080 │ 51619590 │
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│ 3228 │ 44658301 │
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│ 38230 │ 42045932 │
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│ 145263 │ 42042158 │
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│ 91244 │ 38297270 │
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│ 154139 │ 26647572 │
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│ 150748 │ 24112755 │
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│ 242232 │ 21302571 │
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│ 338158 │ 13507087 │
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│ 62180 │ 12229491 │
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│ 82264 │ 12187441 │
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│ 232261 │ 12148031 │
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│ 146272 │ 11438516 │
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│ 168777 │ 11403636 │
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│ 4120072 │ 11227824 │
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│ 10938808 │ 10519739 │
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│ 74088 │ 9047015 │
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│ 115079 │ 8837972 │
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│ 337234 │ 8205961 │
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└───────────┴──────────┘
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20 rows in set. Elapsed: 0.153 sec. Processed 1.00 billion rows, 4.00 GB (6.53 billion rows/s., 26.10 GB/s.)
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:)
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</details>
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### CPU {#cpu}
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Since executing a query requires processing a large number of rows, it
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helps to dispatch all operations for entire vectors instead of for
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separate rows, or to implement the query engine so that there is almost
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no dispatching cost. If you don’t do this, with any half-decent disk
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subsystem, the query interpreter inevitably stalls the CPU. It makes
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sense to both store data in columns and process it, when possible, by
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columns.
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There are two ways to do this:
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1. A vector engine. All operations are written for vectors, instead of
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for separate values. This means you don’t need to call operations
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very often, and dispatching costs are negligible. Operation code
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contains an optimized internal cycle.
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2. Code generation. The code generated for the query has all the
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indirect calls in it.
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This is not done in “normal” databases, because it doesn’t make sense
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when running simple queries. However, there are exceptions. For example,
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MemSQL uses code generation to reduce latency when processing SQL
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queries. (For comparison, analytical DBMSs require optimization of
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throughput, not latency.)
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Note that for CPU efficiency, the query language must be declarative
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(SQL or MDX), or at least a vector (J, K). The query should only contain
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implicit loops, allowing for optimization.
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[Original article](https://clickhouse.tech/docs/en/) <!--hide-->
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