A Ruby database ActiveRecord driver for ClickHouse. Support Rails >= 5.2. Support ClickHouse version from 20.9 LTS.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'clickhouse-activerecord'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install clickhouse-activerecord
default: &default
adapter: clickhouse
database: database
host: localhost
port: 8123
username: username
password: password
ssl: true # optional for using ssl connection
debug: true # use for showing in to log technical information
migrations_paths: db/clickhouse # optional, default: db/migrate_clickhouse
cluster_name: 'cluster_name' # optional for creating tables in cluster
replica_name: '{replica}' # replica macros name, optional for creating replicated tables
Alternatively if you wish to pass a custom Net::HTTP
transport (or any other
object which supports a .post()
function with the same parameters as
Net::HTTP
's), you can do this directly instead of specifying
host
/port
/ssl
:
class ActionView < ActiveRecord::Base
establish_connection(
adapter: 'clickhouse',
database: 'database',
connection: Net::HTTP.start('http://example.org', 8123)
)
end
Add your database.yml
connection information with postfix _clickhouse
for you environment:
development_clickhouse:
adapter: clickhouse
database: database
Add to your model:
class Action < ActiveRecord::Base
establish_connection "#{Rails.env}_clickhouse".to_sym
end
For materialized view model add:
class ActionView < ActiveRecord::Base
establish_connection "#{Rails.env}_clickhouse".to_sym
self.is_view = true
end
Or global connection:
development:
adapter: clickhouse
database: database
Add your database.yml
connection information for you environment:
development:
primary:
...
clickhouse:
adapter: clickhouse
database: database
Connection Multiple Databases with Active Record or short example:
class Action < ActiveRecord::Base
connects_to database: { writing: :clickhouse, reading: :clickhouse }
end
Note! For Rails 6 you can use default rake tasks if you configure migrations_paths
in your database.yml
, for example: rake db:migrate
Create / drop / purge / reset database:
$ rake clickhouse:create
$ rake clickhouse:drop
$ rake clickhouse:purge
$ rake clickhouse:reset
Prepare system tables for rails:
$ rake clickhouse:prepare_schema_migration_table
$ rake clickhouse:prepare_internal_metadata_table
Migration:
$ rails g clickhouse_migration MIGRATION_NAME COLUMNS
$ rake clickhouse:migrate
$ rake clickhouse:rollback
If you using multiple databases, for example: PostgreSQL, Clickhouse.
Schema dump to db/clickhouse_schema.rb
file:
$ rake clickhouse:schema:dump
Schema load from db/clickhouse_schema.rb
file:
$ rake clickhouse:schema:load
For export schema to PostgreSQL, you need use:
$ rake clickhouse:schema:dump -- --simple
Schema will be dump to db/clickhouse_schema_simple.rb
. If default file exists, it will be auto update after migration.
Structure dump to db/clickhouse_structure.sql
file:
$ rake clickhouse:structure:dump
Structure load from db/clickhouse_structure.sql
file:
$ rake clickhouse:structure:load
$ rake db:schema:dump
$ rake db:schema:load
$ rake db:structure:dump
$ rake db:structure:load
Action.where(url: 'http://example.com', date: Date.current).where.not(name: nil).order(created_at: :desc).limit(10)
# Clickhouse Action Load (10.3ms) SELECT actions.* FROM actions WHERE actions.date = '2017-11-29' AND actions.url = 'http://example.com' AND (actions.name IS NOT NULL) ORDER BY actions.created_at DESC LIMIT 10
#=> #<ActiveRecord::Relation [#<Action *** >]>
Action.create(url: 'http://example.com', date: Date.yesterday)
# Clickhouse Action Load (10.8ms) INSERT INTO actions (url, date) VALUES ('http://example.com', '2017-11-28')
#=> true
ActionView.maximum(:date)
# Clickhouse (10.3ms) SELECT maxMerge(actions.date) FROM actions
#=> 'Wed, 29 Nov 2017'
Integer types are unsigned by default. Specify signed values with :unsigned => false
. The default integer is UInt32
Type (bit size) | Range | :limit (byte size) |
---|---|---|
Int8 | -128 to 127 | 1 |
Int16 | -32768 to 32767 | 2 |
Int32 | -2147483648 to 2,147,483,647 | 3,4 |
Int64 | -9223372036854775808 to 9223372036854775807] | 5,6,7,8 |
Int128 | ... | 9 - 15 |
Int256 | ... | 16+ |
UInt8 | 0 to 255 | 1 |
UInt16 | 0 to 65,535 | 2 |
UInt32 | 0 to 4,294,967,295 | 3,4 |
UInt64 | 0 to 18446744073709551615 | 5,6,7,8 |
UInt256 | 0 to ... | 8+ |
Array | ... | ... |
Example:
class CreateDataItems < ActiveRecord::Migration
def change
create_table "data_items", id: false, options: "VersionedCollapsingMergeTree(sign, version) PARTITION BY toYYYYMM(day) ORDER BY category", force: :cascade do |t|
t.date "day", null: false
t.string "category", null: false
t.integer "value_in", null: false
t.integer "sign", limit: 1, unsigned: false, default: -> { "CAST(1, 'Int8')" }, null: false
t.integer "version", limit: 8, default: -> { "CAST(toUnixTimestamp(now()), 'UInt64')" }, null: false
end
end
end
default: &default
***
cluster_name: 'cluster_name'
replica_name: '{replica}'
ON CLUSTER cluster_name
will be attach to all queries create / drop.
Engines MergeTree
and all support replication engines will be replaced to Replicated***('/clickhouse/tables/cluster_name/database.table', '{replica}')
Donations to this project are going directly to PNixx, the original author of this project:
- BTC address:
1H3rhpf7WEF5JmMZ3PVFMQc7Hm29THgUfN
- ETH address:
0x6F094365A70fe7836A633d2eE80A1FA9758234d5
- XMR address:
42gP71qLB5M43RuDnrQ3vSJFFxis9Kw9VMURhpx9NLQRRwNvaZRjm2TFojAMC8Fk1BQhZNKyWhoyJSn5Ak9kppgZPjE17Zh
After checking out the repo, run bin/setup
to install dependencies. You can also run bin/console
for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.
To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install
. To release a new version, update the version number in version.rb
, and then run bundle exec rake release
, which will create a git tag for the version, push git commits and tags, and push the .gem
file to rubygems.org.
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/pnixx/clickhouse-activerecord. This project is intended to be a safe, welcoming space for collaboration, and contributors are expected to adhere to the Contributor Covenant code of conduct.
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.