infi.clickhouse_orm/docs/table_engines.md
2019-07-15 13:01:45 +05:00

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Table Engines

See: ClickHouse Documentation

Each model must have an engine instance, used when creating the table in ClickHouse.

The following engines are supported by the ORM:

  • TinyLog
  • Log
  • Memory
  • MergeTree / ReplicatedMergeTree
  • CollapsingMergeTree / ReplicatedCollapsingMergeTree
  • SummingMergeTree / ReplicatedSummingMergeTree
  • ReplacingMergeTree / ReplicatedReplacingMergeTree
  • Buffer
  • Merge
  • Distributed

Simple Engines

TinyLog, Log and Memory engines do not require any parameters:

engine = engines.TinyLog()

engine = engines.Log()

engine = engines.Memory()

Engines in the MergeTree Family

To define a MergeTree engine, supply the date column name and the names (or expressions) for the key columns:

engine = engines.MergeTree('EventDate', ('CounterID', 'EventDate'))

You may also provide a sampling expression:

engine = engines.MergeTree('EventDate', ('CounterID', 'EventDate'), sampling_expr='intHash32(UserID)')

A CollapsingMergeTree engine is defined in a similar manner, but requires also a sign column:

engine = engines.CollapsingMergeTree('EventDate', ('CounterID', 'EventDate'), 'Sign')

For a SummingMergeTree you can optionally specify the summing columns:

engine = engines.SummingMergeTree('EventDate', ('OrderID', 'EventDate', 'BannerID'),
                                  summing_cols=('Shows', 'Clicks', 'Cost'))

For a ReplacingMergeTree you can optionally specify the version column:

engine = engines.ReplacingMergeTree('EventDate', ('OrderID', 'EventDate', 'BannerID'), ver_col='Version')

Custom partitioning

ClickHouse supports custom partitioning expressions since version 1.1.54310

You can use custom partitioning with any MergeTree family engine. To set custom partitioning:

  • Instead of specifying the date_col (first) constructor parameter, pass a tuple of field names or expressions in the order_by (second) constructor parameter.
  • Add partition_key parameter. It should be a tuple of expressions, by which partitions are built.

Standard monthly partitioning by date column can be specified using the toYYYYMM(date) function.

Example:

engine = engines.ReplacingMergeTree(order_by=('OrderID', 'EventDate', 'BannerID'), ver_col='Version',
                                    partition_key=('toYYYYMM(EventDate)', 'BannerID'))

Primary key

ClickHouse supports custom primary key expressions since version 1.1.54310

You can use custom primary key with any MergeTree family engine. To set custom partitioning add primary_key parameter. It should be a tuple of expressions, by which partitions are built.

By default primary key is equal to order_by expression

Example:

engine = engines.ReplacingMergeTree(order_by=('OrderID', 'EventDate', 'BannerID'), ver_col='Version',
                                    partition_key=('toYYYYMM(EventDate)', 'BannerID'), primary_key=('OrderID',))

Data Replication

Any of the above engines can be converted to a replicated engine (e.g. ReplicatedMergeTree) by adding two parameters, replica_table_path and replica_name:

engine = engines.MergeTree('EventDate', ('CounterID', 'EventDate'),
                           replica_table_path='/clickhouse/tables/{layer}-{shard}/hits',
                           replica_name='{replica}')

Buffer Engine

A Buffer engine is only used in conjunction with a BufferModel. The model should be a subclass of both models.BufferModel and the main model. The main model is also passed to the engine:

class PersonBuffer(models.BufferModel, Person):

    engine = engines.Buffer(Person)

Additional buffer parameters can optionally be specified:

    engine = engines.Buffer(Person, num_layers=16, min_time=10,
                            max_time=100, min_rows=10000, max_rows=1000000,
                            min_bytes=10000000, max_bytes=100000000)

Then you can insert objects into Buffer model and they will be handled by ClickHouse properly:

db.create_table(PersonBuffer)
suzy = PersonBuffer(first_name='Suzy', last_name='Jones')
dan = PersonBuffer(first_name='Dan', last_name='Schwartz')
db.insert([dan, suzy])

Merge Engine

ClickHouse docs

A Merge engine is only used in conjunction with a MergeModel. This table does not store data itself, but allows reading from any number of other tables simultaneously. So you can't insert in it. Engine parameter specifies re2 (similar to PCRE) regular expression, from which data is selected.

class MergeTable(models.MergeModel):
    engine = engines.Merge('^table_prefix')

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