We are the creators of the popular open-source column-oriented DBMS (columnar database management system) for online analytical processing (OLAP) which allows users to generate analytical reports using SQL queries in real-time.
ClickHouse works 100-1000x faster than traditional database management systems, and processes hundreds of millions to over a billion rows and tens of gigabytes of data per server per second. With a widespread user base around the globe, the technology has received praise for its reliability, ease of use, and fault tolerance.
For more information and documentation see https://clickhouse.com/.
docker run -d --name some-clickhouse-server --ulimit nofile=262144:262144 clickhouse/clickhouse-server
By default, ClickHouse will be accessible only via the Docker network. See the networking section below.
By default, starting above server instance will be run as the default
user without a password.
docker run -it --rm --link some-clickhouse-server:clickhouse-server --entrypoint clickhouse-client clickhouse/clickhouse-server --host clickhouse-server
# OR
docker exec -it some-clickhouse-server clickhouse-client
More information about the ClickHouse client.
echo "SELECT 'Hello, ClickHouse!'" | docker run -i --rm --link some-clickhouse-server:clickhouse-server curlimages/curl 'http://clickhouse-server:8123/?query=' -s --data-binary @-
More information about ClickHouse HTTP Interface.
docker stop some-clickhouse-server
docker rm some-clickhouse-server
You can expose your ClickHouse running in docker by mapping a particular port from inside the container using host ports:
docker run -d -p 18123:8123 -p19000:9000 --name some-clickhouse-server --ulimit nofile=262144:262144 clickhouse/clickhouse-server
echo 'SELECT version()' | curl 'http://localhost:18123/' --data-binary @-
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or by allowing the container to use host ports directly using --network=host
(also allows archiving better network performance):
docker run -d --network=host --name some-clickhouse-server --ulimit nofile=262144:262144 clickhouse/clickhouse-server
echo 'SELECT version()' | curl 'http://localhost:8123/' --data-binary @-
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Typically you may want to mount the following folders inside your container to achieve persistency:
/var/lib/clickhouse/
- main folder where ClickHouse stores the data/var/log/clickhouse-server/
- logs
docker run -d \
-v $(realpath ./ch_data):/var/lib/clickhouse/ \
-v $(realpath ./ch_logs):/var/log/clickhouse-server/ \
--name some-clickhouse-server --ulimit nofile=262144:262144 clickhouse/clickhouse-server
You may also want to mount:
/etc/clickhouse-server/config.d/*.xml
- files with server configuration adjustmenets/etc/clickhouse-server/users.d/*.xml
- files with user settings adjustmenets/docker-entrypoint-initdb.d/
- folder with database initialization scripts (see below).
ClickHouse has some advanced functionality, which requires enabling several Linux capabilities.
These are optional and can be enabled using the following docker command-line arguments:
docker run -d \
--cap-add=SYS_NICE --cap-add=NET_ADMIN --cap-add=IPC_LOCK \
--name some-clickhouse-server --ulimit nofile=262144:262144 clickhouse/clickhouse-server
The container exposes port 8123 for the HTTP interface and port 9000 for the native client.
ClickHouse configuration is represented with a file "config.xml" (documentation)
docker run -d --name some-clickhouse-server --ulimit nofile=262144:262144 -v /path/to/your/config.xml:/etc/clickhouse-server/config.xml clickhouse/clickhouse-server
# $(pwd)/data/clickhouse should exist and be owned by current user
docker run --rm --user ${UID}:${GID} --name some-clickhouse-server --ulimit nofile=262144:262144 -v "$(pwd)/logs/clickhouse:/var/log/clickhouse-server" -v "$(pwd)/data/clickhouse:/var/lib/clickhouse" clickhouse/clickhouse-server
When you use the image with local directories mounted, you probably want to specify the user to maintain the proper file ownership. Use the --user
argument and mount /var/lib/clickhouse
and /var/log/clickhouse-server
inside the container. Otherwise, the image will complain and not start.
docker run --rm -e CLICKHOUSE_UID=0 -e CLICKHOUSE_GID=0 --name clickhouse-server-userns -v "$(pwd)/logs/clickhouse:/var/log/clickhouse-server" -v "$(pwd)/data/clickhouse:/var/lib/clickhouse" clickhouse/clickhouse-server
Sometimes you may want to create a user (user named default
is used by default) and database on image start. You can do it using environment variables CLICKHOUSE_DB
, CLICKHOUSE_USER
, CLICKHOUSE_DEFAULT_ACCESS_MANAGEMENT
and CLICKHOUSE_PASSWORD
:
docker run --rm -e CLICKHOUSE_DB=my_database -e CLICKHOUSE_USER=username -e CLICKHOUSE_DEFAULT_ACCESS_MANAGEMENT=1 -e CLICKHOUSE_PASSWORD=password -p 9000:9000/tcp clickhouse/clickhouse-server
To perform additional initialization in an image derived from this one, add one or more *.sql
, *.sql.gz
, or *.sh
scripts under /docker-entrypoint-initdb.d
. After the entrypoint calls initdb
, it will run any *.sql
files, run any executable *.sh
scripts, and source any non-executable *.sh
scripts found in that directory to do further initialization before starting the service.
Also, you can provide environment variables CLICKHOUSE_USER
& CLICKHOUSE_PASSWORD
that will be used for clickhouse-client during initialization.
For example, to add an additional user and database, add the following to /docker-entrypoint-initdb.d/init-db.sh
:
#!/bin/bash
set -e
clickhouse client -n <<-EOSQL
CREATE DATABASE docker;
CREATE TABLE docker.docker (x Int32) ENGINE = Log;
EOSQL
View license information for the software contained in this image.