* Additional .gitignore entries * Merge a bunch of small articles about system tables into single one * Merge a bunch of small articles about formats into single one * Adapt table with formats to English docs too * Add SPb meetup link to main page * Move Utilities out of top level of docs (the location is probably not yet final) + translate couple articles * Merge MacOS.md into build_osx.md * Move Data types higher in ToC * Publish changelog on website alongside documentation * Few fixes for en/table_engines/file.md * Use smaller header sizes in changelogs * Group up table engines inside ToC * Move table engines out of top level too * Specificy in ToC that query language is SQL based. Thats a bit excessive, but catches eye. * Move stuff that is part of query language into respective folder * Move table functions lower in ToC * Lost redirects.txt update * Do not rely on comments in yaml + fix few ru titles * Extract major parts of queries.md into separate articles * queries.md has been supposed to be removed * Fix weird translation * Fix a bunch of links * There is only table of contents left * "Query language" is actually part of SQL abbreviation * Change filename in README.md too * fix mistype * s/formats\/interfaces/interfaces\/formats/g * Remove extra clarification from header as it was too verbose, probably making it a bit more confusing * Empty article was supposed to be hidden * At least change incorrect title * Move special links to the bottom of nav and slightly highlight them * Skip hidden pages in bottom navigation too * Make front page of documentation to be part of Introduction * Make tables in introduction somewhat readable + move abbreviation definitions earlier * Some introduction text refactoring * Some docs introduction refactoring * Use admonitions instead of divs * Additional .gitignore * Treat .gif as images too * Clarify ToC item
3.1 KiB
remote
Allows you to access remote servers without creating a Distributed
table.
Signatures:
remote('addresses_expr', db, table[, 'user'[, 'password']])
remote('addresses_expr', db.table[, 'user'[, 'password']])
addresses_expr
– An expression that generates addresses of remote servers. This may be just one server address. The server address is host:port
, or just host
. The host can be specified as the server name, or as the IPv4 or IPv6 address. An IPv6 address is specified in square brackets. The port is the TCP port on the remote server. If the port is omitted, it uses tcp_port
from the server's config file (by default, 9000).
!!! important The port is required for an IPv6 address.
Examples:
example01-01-1
example01-01-1:9000
localhost
127.0.0.1
[::]:9000
[2a02:6b8:0:1111::11]:9000
Multiple addresses can be comma-separated. In this case, ClickHouse will use distributed processing, so it will send the query to all specified addresses (like to shards with different data).
Example:
example01-01-1,example01-02-1
Part of the expression can be specified in curly brackets. The previous example can be written as follows:
example01-0{1,2}-1
Curly brackets can contain a range of numbers separated by two dots (non-negative integers). In this case, the range is expanded to a set of values that generate shard addresses. If the first number starts with zero, the values are formed with the same zero alignment. The previous example can be written as follows:
example01-{01..02}-1
If you have multiple pairs of curly brackets, it generates the direct product of the corresponding sets.
Addresses and parts of addresses in curly brackets can be separated by the pipe symbol (|). In this case, the corresponding sets of addresses are interpreted as replicas, and the query will be sent to the first healthy replica. However, the replicas are iterated in the order currently set in the load_balancing setting.
Example:
example01-{01..02}-{1|2}
This example specifies two shards that each have two replicas.
The number of addresses generated is limited by a constant. Right now this is 1000 addresses.
Using the remote
table function is less optimal than creating a Distributed
table, because in this case, the server connection is re-established for every request. In addition, if host names are set, the names are resolved, and errors are not counted when working with various replicas. When processing a large number of queries, always create the Distributed
table ahead of time, and don't use the remote
table function.
The remote
table function can be useful in the following cases:
- Accessing a specific server for data comparison, debugging, and testing.
- Queries between various ClickHouse clusters for research purposes.
- Infrequent distributed requests that are made manually.
- Distributed requests where the set of servers is re-defined each time.
If the user is not specified, default
is used.
If the password is not specified, an empty password is used.