ClickHouse/docs/en/engines/table-engines/special/url.md

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URL Table Engine

Queries data to/from a remote HTTP/HTTPS server. This engine is similar to the File engine.

Syntax: URL(URL [,Format] [,CompressionMethod])

  • The URL parameter must conform to the structure of a Uniform Resource Locator. The specified URL must point to a server that uses HTTP or HTTPS. This does not require any additional headers for getting a response from the server.

  • The Format must be one that ClickHouse can use in SELECT queries and, if necessary, in INSERTs. For the full list of supported formats, see Formats.

    If this argument is not specified, ClickHouse detects the format automatically from the suffix of the URL parameter. If the suffix of URL parameter does not match any supported formats, it fails to create table. For example, for engine expression URL('http://localhost/test.json'), JSON format is applied.

  • CompressionMethod indicates that whether the HTTP body should be compressed. If the compression is enabled, the HTTP packets sent by the URL engine contain 'Content-Encoding' header to indicate which compression method is used.

To enable compression, please first make sure the remote HTTP endpoint indicated by the URL parameter supports corresponding compression algorithm.

The supported CompressionMethod should be one of following:

  • gzip or gz
  • deflate
  • brotli or br
  • lzma or xz
  • zstd or zst
  • lz4
  • bz2
  • snappy
  • none
  • auto

If CompressionMethod is not specified, it defaults to auto. This means ClickHouse detects compression method from the suffix of URL parameter automatically. If the suffix matches any of compression method listed above, corresponding compression is applied or there won't be any compression enabled.

For example, for engine expression URL('http://localhost/test.gzip'), gzip compression method is applied, but for URL('http://localhost/test.fr'), no compression is enabled because the suffix fr does not match any compression methods above.

Usage

INSERT and SELECT queries are transformed to POST and GET requests, respectively. For processing POST requests, the remote server must support Chunked transfer encoding.

You can limit the maximum number of HTTP GET redirect hops using the max_http_get_redirects setting.

Example

1. Create a url_engine_table table on the server :

CREATE TABLE url_engine_table (word String, value UInt64)
ENGINE=URL('http://127.0.0.1:12345/', CSV)

2. Create a basic HTTP server using the standard Python 3 tools and start it:

from http.server import BaseHTTPRequestHandler, HTTPServer

class CSVHTTPServer(BaseHTTPRequestHandler):
    def do_GET(self):
        self.send_response(200)
        self.send_header('Content-type', 'text/csv')
        self.end_headers()

        self.wfile.write(bytes('Hello,1\nWorld,2\n', "utf-8"))

if __name__ == "__main__":
    server_address = ('127.0.0.1', 12345)
    HTTPServer(server_address, CSVHTTPServer).serve_forever()
$ python3 server.py

3. Request data:

SELECT * FROM url_engine_table
┌─word──┬─value─┐
│ Hello │     1 │
│ World │     2 │
└───────┴───────┘

Details of Implementation

  • Reads and writes can be parallel
  • Not supported:
    • ALTER and SELECT...SAMPLE operations.
    • Indexes.
    • Replication.

PARTITION BY

PARTITION BY — Optional. It is possible to create separate files by partitioning the data on a partition key. In most cases, you don't need a partition key, and if it is needed you generally don't need a partition key more granular than by month. Partitioning does not speed up queries (in contrast to the ORDER BY expression). You should never use too granular partitioning. Don't partition your data by client identifiers or names (instead, make client identifier or name the first column in the ORDER BY expression).

For partitioning by month, use the toYYYYMM(date_column) expression, where date_column is a column with a date of the type Date. The partition names here have the "YYYYMM" format.