3.9 KiB
slug | sidebar_position | sidebar_label |
---|---|---|
/en/engines/table-engines/special/file | 40 | File |
File Table Engine
The File table engine keeps the data in a file in one of the supported file formats (TabSeparated
, Native
, etc.).
Usage scenarios:
- Data export from ClickHouse to file.
- Convert data from one format to another.
- Updating data in ClickHouse via editing a file on a disk.
Usage in ClickHouse Server
File(Format)
The Format
parameter specifies one of the available file formats. To perform
SELECT
queries, the format must be supported for input, and to perform
INSERT
queries – for output. The available formats are listed in the
Formats section.
ClickHouse does not allow specifying filesystem path for File
. It will use folder defined by path setting in server configuration.
When creating table using File(Format)
it creates empty subdirectory in that folder. When data is written to that table, it’s put into data.Format
file in that subdirectory.
You may manually create this subfolder and file in server filesystem and then ATTACH it to table information with matching name, so you can query data from that file.
:::note Be careful with this functionality, because ClickHouse does not keep track of external changes to such files. The result of simultaneous writes via ClickHouse and outside of ClickHouse is undefined. :::
Example
1. Set up the file_engine_table
table:
CREATE TABLE file_engine_table (name String, value UInt32) ENGINE=File(TabSeparated)
By default ClickHouse will create folder /var/lib/clickhouse/data/default/file_engine_table
.
2. Manually create /var/lib/clickhouse/data/default/file_engine_table/data.TabSeparated
containing:
$ cat data.TabSeparated
one 1
two 2
3. Query the data:
SELECT * FROM file_engine_table
┌─name─┬─value─┐
│ one │ 1 │
│ two │ 2 │
└──────┴───────┘
Usage in ClickHouse-local
In clickhouse-local File engine accepts file path in addition to Format
. Default input/output streams can be specified using numeric or human-readable names like 0
or stdin
, 1
or stdout
. It is possible to read and write compressed files based on an additional engine parameter or file extension (gz
, br
or xz
).
Example:
$ echo -e "1,2\n3,4" | clickhouse-local -q "CREATE TABLE table (a Int64, b Int64) ENGINE = File(CSV, stdin); SELECT a, b FROM table; DROP TABLE table"
Details of Implementation
- Multiple
SELECT
queries can be performed concurrently, butINSERT
queries will wait each other. - Supported creating new file by
INSERT
query. - If file exists,
INSERT
would append new values in it. - Not supported:
ALTER
SELECT ... SAMPLE
- Indices
- 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.