Skip to main content

Named collections

Not supported in ClickHouse Cloud

Named collections provide a way to store collections of key-value pairs to be used to configure integrations with external sources. You can use named collections with dictionaries, tables, table functions, and object storage.

Named collections can be configured with DDL or in configuration files and are applied when ClickHouse starts. They simplify the creation of objects and the hiding of credentials from users without administrative access.

The keys in a named collection must match the parameter names of the corresponding function, table engine, database, etc. In the examples below the parameter list is linked to for each type.

Parameters set in a named collection can be overridden in SQL, this is shown in the examples below. This ability can be limited using [NOT] OVERRIDABLE keywords and XML attributes and/or the configuration option allow_named_collection_override_by_default.

Danger

If override is allowed, it may be possible for users without administrative access to figure out the credentials that you are trying to hide. If you are using named collections with that purpose, you should disable allow_named_collection_override_by_default (which is enabled by default).

Storing named collections in the system database

DDL example

CREATE NAMED COLLECTION name AS
key_1 = 'value' OVERRIDABLE,
key_2 = 'value2' NOT OVERRIDABLE,
url = 'https://connection.url/'

In the above example:

  • key_1 can always be overridden.
  • key_2 can never be overridden.
  • url can be overridden or not depending on the value of allow_named_collection_override_by_default.

Permissions to create named collections with DDL

To manage named collections with DDL a user must have the named_control_collection privilege. This can be assigned by adding a file to /etc/clickhouse-server/users.d/. The example gives the user default both the access_management and named_collection_control privileges:

/etc/clickhouse-server/users.d/user_default.xml
<clickhouse>
<users>
<default>
<password_sha256_hex>65e84be33532fb784c48129675f9eff3a682b27168c0ea744b2cf58ee02337c5</password_sha256_hex replace=true>
<access_management>1</access_management>
<named_collection_control>1</named_collection_control>
</default>
</users>
</clickhouse>
Tip

In the above example the password_sha256_hex value is the hexadecimal representation of the SHA256 hash of the password. This configuration for the user default has the attribute replace=true as in the default configuration has a plain text password set, and it is not possible to have both plain text and sha256 hex passwords set for a user.

Storage for named collections

Named collections can either be stored on local disk or in ZooKeeper/Keeper. By default local storage is used. They can also be stored using encryption with the same algorithms used for disk encryption, where aes_128_ctr is used by default.

To configure named collections storage you need to specify a type. This can be either local or keeper/zookeeper. For encrypted storage, you can use local_encrypted or keeper_encrypted/zookeeper_encrypted.

To use ZooKeeper/Keeper we also need to set up a path (path in ZooKeeper/Keeper, where named collections will be stored) to named_collections_storage section in configuration file. The following example uses encryption and ZooKeeper/Keeper:

<clickhouse>
<named_collections_storage>
<type>zookeeper_encrypted</type>
<key_hex>bebec0cabebec0cabebec0cabebec0ca</key_hex>
<algorithm>aes_128_ctr</algorithm>
<path>/named_collections_path/</path>
<update_timeout_ms>1000</update_timeout_ms>
</named_collections_storage>
</clickhouse>

An optional configuration parameter update_timeout_ms by default is equal to 5000.

Storing named collections in configuration files

XML example

/etc/clickhouse-server/config.d/named_collections.xml
<clickhouse>
<named_collections>
<name>
<key_1 overridable="true">value</key_1>
<key_2 overridable="false">value_2</key_2>
<url>https://connection.url/</url>
</name>
</named_collections>
</clickhouse>

In the above example:

  • key_1 can always be overridden.
  • key_2 can never be overridden.
  • url can be overridden or not depending on the value of allow_named_collection_override_by_default.

Modifying named collections

Named collections that are created with DDL queries can be altered or dropped with DDL. Named collections created with XML files can be managed by editing or deleting the corresponding XML.

Alter a DDL named collection

Change or add the keys key1 and key3 of the collection collection2 (this will not change the value of the overridable flag for those keys):

ALTER NAMED COLLECTION collection2 SET key1=4, key3='value3'

Change or add the key key1 and allow it to be always overridden:

ALTER NAMED COLLECTION collection2 SET key1=4 OVERRIDABLE

Remove the key key2 from collection2:

ALTER NAMED COLLECTION collection2 DELETE key2

Change or add the key key1 and delete the key key3 of the collection collection2:

ALTER NAMED COLLECTION collection2 SET key1=4, DELETE key3

To force a key to use the default settings for the overridable flag, you have to remove and re-add the key.

ALTER NAMED COLLECTION collection2 DELETE key1;
ALTER NAMED COLLECTION collection2 SET key1=4;

Drop the DDL named collection collection2:

DROP NAMED COLLECTION collection2

Named collections for accessing S3

The description of parameters see s3 Table Function.

DDL example

CREATE NAMED COLLECTION s3_mydata AS
access_key_id = 'AKIAIOSFODNN7EXAMPLE',
secret_access_key = 'wJalrXUtnFEMI/K7MDENG/bPxRfiCYEXAMPLEKEY',
format = 'CSV',
url = 'https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/yourbucket/mydata/'

XML example

<clickhouse>
<named_collections>
<s3_mydata>
<access_key_id>AKIAIOSFODNN7EXAMPLE</access_key_id>
<secret_access_key>wJalrXUtnFEMI/K7MDENG/bPxRfiCYEXAMPLEKEY</secret_access_key>
<format>CSV</format>
<url>https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/yourbucket/mydata/</url>
</s3_mydata>
</named_collections>
</clickhouse>

s3() function and S3 Table named collection examples

Both of the following examples use the same named collection s3_mydata:

s3() function

INSERT INTO FUNCTION s3(s3_mydata, filename = 'test_file.tsv.gz',
format = 'TSV', structure = 'number UInt64', compression_method = 'gzip')
SELECT * FROM numbers(10000);
Tip

The first argument to the s3() function above is the name of the collection, s3_mydata. Without named collections, the access key ID, secret, format, and URL would all be passed in every call to the s3() function.

S3 table

CREATE TABLE s3_engine_table (number Int64)
ENGINE=S3(s3_mydata, url='https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/yourbucket/mydata/test_file.tsv.gz', format = 'TSV')
SETTINGS input_format_with_names_use_header = 0;

SELECT * FROM s3_engine_table LIMIT 3;
┌─number─┐
0
1
2
└────────┘

Named collections for accessing MySQL database

The description of parameters see mysql.

DDL example

CREATE NAMED COLLECTION mymysql AS
user = 'myuser',
password = 'mypass',
host = '127.0.0.1',
port = 3306,
database = 'test',
connection_pool_size = 8,
replace_query = 1

XML example

<clickhouse>
<named_collections>
<mymysql>
<user>myuser</user>
<password>mypass</password>
<host>127.0.0.1</host>
<port>3306</port>
<database>test</database>
<connection_pool_size>8</connection_pool_size>
<replace_query>1</replace_query>
</mymysql>
</named_collections>
</clickhouse>

mysql() function, MySQL table, MySQL database, and Dictionary named collection examples

The four following examples use the same named collection mymysql:

mysql() function

SELECT count() FROM mysql(mymysql, table = 'test');

┌─count()─┐
3
└─────────┘
Note

The named collection does not specify the table parameter, so it is specified in the function call as table = 'test'.

MySQL table

CREATE TABLE mytable(A Int64) ENGINE = MySQL(mymysql, table = 'test', connection_pool_size=3, replace_query=0);
SELECT count() FROM mytable;

┌─count()─┐
3
└─────────┘
Note

The DDL overrides the named collection setting for connection_pool_size.

MySQL database

CREATE DATABASE mydatabase ENGINE = MySQL(mymysql);

SHOW TABLES FROM mydatabase;

┌─name───┐
│ source │
│ test │
└────────┘

MySQL Dictionary

CREATE DICTIONARY dict (A Int64, B String)
PRIMARY KEY A
SOURCE(MYSQL(NAME mymysql TABLE 'source'))
LIFETIME(MIN 1 MAX 2)
LAYOUT(HASHED());

SELECT dictGet('dict', 'B', 2);

┌─dictGet('dict', 'B', 2)─┐
│ two │
└─────────────────────────┘

Named collections for accessing PostgreSQL database

The description of parameters see postgresql. Additionally, there are aliases:

  • username for user
  • db for database.

Parameter addresses_expr is used in a collection instead of host:port. The parameter is optional, because there are other optional ones: host, hostname, port. The following pseudo code explains the priority:

CASE
WHEN collection['addresses_expr'] != '' THEN collection['addresses_expr']
WHEN collection['host'] != '' THEN collection['host'] || ':' || if(collection['port'] != '', collection['port'], '5432')
WHEN collection['hostname'] != '' THEN collection['hostname'] || ':' || if(collection['port'] != '', collection['port'], '5432')
END

Example of creation:

CREATE NAMED COLLECTION mypg AS
user = 'pguser',
password = 'jw8s0F4',
host = '127.0.0.1',
port = 5432,
database = 'test',
schema = 'test_schema'

Example of configuration:

<clickhouse>
<named_collections>
<mypg>
<user>pguser</user>
<password>jw8s0F4</password>
<host>127.0.0.1</host>
<port>5432</port>
<database>test</database>
<schema>test_schema</schema>
</mypg>
</named_collections>
</clickhouse>

Example of using named collections with the postgresql function

SELECT * FROM postgresql(mypg, table = 'test');

┌─a─┬─b───┐
2 │ two │
1 │ one │
└───┴─────┘


SELECT * FROM postgresql(mypg, table = 'test', schema = 'public');

┌─a─┐
1
2
3
└───┘

Example of using named collections with database with engine PostgreSQL

CREATE TABLE mypgtable (a Int64) ENGINE = PostgreSQL(mypg, table = 'test', schema = 'public');

SELECT * FROM mypgtable;

┌─a─┐
1
2
3
└───┘
Note

PostgreSQL copies data from the named collection when the table is being created. A change in the collection does not affect the existing tables.

Example of using named collections with database with engine PostgreSQL

CREATE DATABASE mydatabase ENGINE = PostgreSQL(mypg);

SHOW TABLES FROM mydatabase

┌─name─┐
│ test │
└──────┘

Example of using named collections with a dictionary with source POSTGRESQL

CREATE DICTIONARY dict (a Int64, b String)
PRIMARY KEY a
SOURCE(POSTGRESQL(NAME mypg TABLE test))
LIFETIME(MIN 1 MAX 2)
LAYOUT(HASHED());

SELECT dictGet('dict', 'b', 2);

┌─dictGet('dict', 'b', 2)─┐
│ two │
└─────────────────────────┘

Named collections for accessing a remote ClickHouse database

The description of parameters see remote.

Example of configuration:

CREATE NAMED COLLECTION remote1 AS
host = 'remote_host',
port = 9000,
database = 'system',
user = 'foo',
password = 'secret',
secure = 1
<clickhouse>
<named_collections>
<remote1>
<host>remote_host</host>
<port>9000</port>
<database>system</database>
<user>foo</user>
<password>secret</password>
<secure>1</secure>
</remote1>
</named_collections>
</clickhouse>

secure is not needed for connection because of remoteSecure, but it can be used for dictionaries.

Example of using named collections with the remote/remoteSecure functions

SELECT * FROM remote(remote1, table = one);
┌─dummy─┐
0
└───────┘

SELECT * FROM remote(remote1, database = merge(system, '^one'));
┌─dummy─┐
0
└───────┘

INSERT INTO FUNCTION remote(remote1, database = default, table = test) VALUES (1,'a');

SELECT * FROM remote(remote1, database = default, table = test);
┌─a─┬─b─┐
1 │ a │
└───┴───┘

Example of using named collections with a dictionary with source ClickHouse

CREATE DICTIONARY dict(a Int64, b String)
PRIMARY KEY a
SOURCE(CLICKHOUSE(NAME remote1 TABLE test DB default))
LIFETIME(MIN 1 MAX 2)
LAYOUT(HASHED());

SELECT dictGet('dict', 'b', 1);
┌─dictGet('dict', 'b', 1)─┐
│ a │
└─────────────────────────┘

Named collections for accessing Kafka

The description of parameters see Kafka.

DDL example

CREATE NAMED COLLECTION my_kafka_cluster AS
kafka_broker_list = 'localhost:9092',
kafka_topic_list = 'kafka_topic',
kafka_group_name = 'consumer_group',
kafka_format = 'JSONEachRow',
kafka_max_block_size = '1048576';

XML example

<clickhouse>
<named_collections>
<my_kafka_cluster>
<kafka_broker_list>localhost:9092</kafka_broker_list>
<kafka_topic_list>kafka_topic</kafka_topic_list>
<kafka_group_name>consumer_group</kafka_group_name>
<kafka_format>JSONEachRow</kafka_format>
<kafka_max_block_size>1048576</kafka_max_block_size>
</my_kafka_cluster>
</named_collections>
</clickhouse>

Example of using named collections with a Kafka table

Both of the following examples use the same named collection my_kafka_cluster:

CREATE TABLE queue
(
timestamp UInt64,
level String,
message String
)
ENGINE = Kafka(my_kafka_cluster)

CREATE TABLE queue
(
timestamp UInt64,
level String,
message String
)
ENGINE = Kafka(my_kafka_cluster)
SETTINGS kafka_num_consumers = 4,
kafka_thread_per_consumer = 1;